Classical Music | Piano Music

Maurice Ravel

La Valse  Play

Minsoo Sohn Piano

Recorded on 04/29/2008, uploaded on 01/20/2009

Musician's or Publisher's Notes

La valse                Maurice Ravel

When listening to La Valse, one imagines dancers gradually emerging from a whirlpool of frantic motion.  Ravel wrote that "...[C]louds whirl about. Occasionally they part to allow a glimpse of waltzing couples. As they lift, one can discern a gigantic hall filled with a crowd of dancers in motion. The stage gradually brightens. The glow of the chandeliers breaks out fortissimo." 

Ravel's original idea was to create a work which would be the apotheosis of the Viennese waltz, which ruled the Imperial Court at the time (1855). But as the piece evolved, Ravel called it "a fantastic and fatefully inescapable whirlpool".   One feels the sense of foreboding underlying the frantic elation.  The gaiety seems forced, decadent and anguished.  Ravel combines these contrasting moods of gaiety and impending doom throughout this work.  There is a whirlwind of frantic elation, broken off suddenly into harsh strident chords with an underlying restlessness.  Ravel achieves this through a variety of constantly changing colors, with their tragic underpinnings. 

The original orchestral version was transcribed by Ravel into a piano version in 1920 and into a two-piano version in 1921.       Minsoo Sohn