Classical Music | Piano Music

Maurice Ravel

Alborada del Gracioso, from Miroirs  Play

Ruti Abramovitch Piano

Recorded on 06/20/2012, uploaded on 11/12/2012

Musician's or Publisher's Notes

 In 1900, Maurice Ravel joined a group of young, like-minded musicians, artists and writer called Les Apaches. The group met regularly at the homes of Paul Sordes and Tristan Klingsor, and came to include such other prominent names as Igor Stravinsky and Manuel de Falla. Les Apaches, which obviously refers to the Native American tribe, also had the additional meaning of “hooligans” in French and was coined by Ricardo Viñes to describe the group as “artistic outcasts.” Viñes would premiere several of Ravel’s piano works, including his Miroirs, which the composer dedicated each of its five movements to a member of Les Apaches.

Miroirs was composed during 1904-05 and given its premiere in 1906. Meaning “Reflections,” the work demonstrates the development of Ravel’s technique as a composer of piano music, which had first leapt into maturity in his 1901 piece, Jeux d’eau. Ravel’s treatment of the vast possibilities of the piano was simultaneously inspired by the florid style of Franz Liszt and the most profound advancement in piano technique since that great virtuoso’s time. This style came to be a cornerstone of French Impressionism and even influenced Ravel’s older contemporary, Claude Debussy.

“Alborada del Gracioso” (“The Jester’s Aubade”) is the fourth piece of Miroirs, which Ravel dedicated to the music critic Michel-Dimitri Calvocoressi. An “aubade,” as opposed to a serenade, was a morning love song, the parting of lovers at daybreak. This movement, in Ravel’s Spanish vein, is one of the most technically challenging of the suite, owing to its fast repeated notes and sweeping glissandi in thirds and fourths. It is also one of two (“Une barque sur l’océan” being the other) movements that Ravel later orchestrated. The outer sections are lively and energetic with an incessant dance-like motion paired with its Spanish-influenced melodies. The central episode, on the other hand, contrasts several different elements. A slow, lyrical melody, unaccompanied, begins the episode and is followed by a passage of long-sustained harmonies, while both are punctuated by brief occurrences of the dance-like rhythms heard earlier. From this mostly lethargic and static soundscape erupts a boisterous fortissimo melody, which nonetheless quickly fades away. An altered reprise of the opening completes the movement’s ternary form and the listener is carried on to its spirited and flamboyant conclusion.      Joseph DuBose

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Miroirs, or ‘reflections’, is a set of five pieces written between the years 1904-1905. Each of the pieces is dedicated to a different member of ‘Les apaches’, a group of French musicians, writers, and artists to which Ravel belonged.

Alborada del gracioso (‘The Jester's Morning Song’) is inspired by Spanish music, with its energetic rhythms, imitations of guitar sounds and castanets. The middle section incorporates a lyrical, improvised, free song, also known as the Cante jondo, or ‘deep song’. The Cante jondo originated in the Spanish gypsy and Andalusian tradition which is known today as the Flamenco and is a serious and lamenting song that contains rich embellishments.        Ruti Abramovitch