Debussy 2012

Debussy 2012

August 20, 2012.  Claude Debussy.  This week we celebrate a major event: the 150th anniversary of one of the greatest composers of the late 19th – early-20th century, Claude-Claude DebussyAchille Debussy.  He was born in Saint-Germain-en-Laye, a wealthy suburb of Paris (his family was not).  He started his musical studies at the age of eight, in Nice, where his mother, then pregnant again, fled during the Prussian occupation of Paris in 1870.  At the age of ten he entered the Paris conservatory and studied there for 11 years.  In 1884 he won the Prix de Rome and moved to the French Academy in Rome for a four-year residence.  He didn’t like it there, neither his companions nor the food.  He submitted several pieces, one of which was a symphonic cantata La damoiselle élue.  A pretty but rather straightforward piece with just a hint of the kind of harmonies that Debussy was to develop later, it was still labeled by the Academy as “bizarre.”  In 1888 he visited Bayreuth to see Wagner’s Parsifal and Die Meistersinger and, deeply impressed, made a return a year later for Tristan und Isolde. 1889.  As different as Wagner and Debussy are, it’s not surprising that the shimmering sonorities of Wagner’s orchestra affected the young Debussy.  He later disavowed both the influence and Wagner’s music in general.  Still, it seems that Wagner’s influence is discernable, and not only on Debussy’s only opera, Pelléas et Mélisande.

By about 1890, Debussy had fully developed his own musical language.  One of the first compositions to clearly manifest the new style was Suite bergamasque for piano (you can listen to it here, in the performance by the young Chinese pianist Xiang Zou).  During that period Debussy was spending a lot of time in Stéphane Mallarmé symbolist salon.  Four years later, influenced by a poem by Stéphane Mallarmé, Debussy wrote a symphonic poem Prélude à l'après-midi d'un faune.  The poem was later made into a famous ballet, choreographed by Vaslav Nijinsky.  His only completed opera, Pelléas et Mélisande premiered in 1902.  We had to borrow from YouTube to bring you an excerpt.  It is here; Pierre Boulez conducts the Orchestra of the Royal Opera House, Donald McIntyre is Golaud, George Shirley – a Pelléas, Elisabeth Söderström is Mélisande.   One of Debussy’s most popular compositions, three symphonic "sketches" titled La mer was written in 1903.   A large number of piano compositions followed: Estampes, also in 1903, Children's Corner Suite in 1908, the first book of Préludes in1910 (the second book was written in 1913 and differs in style rather considerably).  Debussy’s works were becoming more angular, with a larger number of unresolved dissonances, such as in this Etude No.11 "Pour les arpèges composes," (1915) performed here by the pianist Jiyeon Shin.  And then in 1917 he wrote the violin sonata, which had much simpler harmonics (it is performed here by the Japanese violinist Mari Lee with Ieva Jokubaviciute on the piano).  We don’t know if there was a general shift in Debussy’s compositional style: he wanted to write six sonatas but completed just three, for violin, for cello, and for flute, viola and harp (you can find all of them in our library).  He died of cancer on March 25, 1918, while Paris was being heavily bombarded by the Germans.  He was buried at the Père Lachaise with no public ceremony.  The following year Debussy was re-interred at Passy, a small pretty cemetery behind the Trocadéro, in the 16th arrondissement.