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PINGKA SIRISUJINTE

Musique de la Vie et de la Terre

French-composer-Claude-Debussy.jpg

Claude Debussy

A great French composer who created a developed a new style and musical idea and he is praised as the symbolic of impressionist

Who is Debussy

Debussy showed a gift as a pianist by the age of nine. He was encouraged by Madame Mauté de Fleurville, who was associated with the Polish composer Frédéric Chopin, and in 1873 he entered the Paris Conservatory, where he studied the piano and composition, eventually winning in 1884 the Grand Prix de Rome with his cantata L’Enfant prodigue (The Prodigal Child).

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The main musical influence in Debussy’s work was the work of Richard Wagner and the Russian composers Aleksandr Borodin and Modest Mussorgsky. Wagner fulfilled the sensuous ambitions not only of composers but also of the Symbolist poets and the Impressionist painters. Wagner’s conception of Gesamtkunstwerk (“total art work”) encouraged artists to refine upon their emotional responses and to exteriorize their hidden dream states, often in a shadowy, incomplete form; hence the more tenuous nature of the work of Wagner’s French disciples. It was in this spirit that Debussy wrote the symphonic poem Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune. Other early works by Debussy show his affinity with the English Pre-Raphaelite painters; the most notable of these works is La Damoiselle élue, based on “The Blessed Damozel” , a poem by the English poet and painter Dante Gabriel Rossetti. In the course of his career, however, which covered only 25 years, Debussy was constantly breaking new ground. Explorations, he maintained, were the essence of music; they were his musical bread and wine. His single completed opera, Pelléas et Mélisande (first performed in 1902), demonstrates how the Wagnerian technique could be adapted to portray subjects like the dreamy nightmarish figures of this opera who were doomed to self-destruction. Debussy and his librettist, Maurice Maeterlinck, declared that they were haunted in this work by the terrifying nightmare tale of Edgar Allan Poe, The Fall of the House of Usher. The style of Pelléas was to be replaced by a bolder, more highly coloured manner. In his seascape La Mer he was inspired by the ideas of the English painter J.M.W. Turner and the French painter Claude Monet. In his work, as in his personal life, he was anxious to gather experience from every region that the imaginative mind could explore.

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In his later years, it is the pursuit of illusion that marks Debussy’s instrumental writing, especially the strange, other-worldly Cello Sonata. This noble bass instrument takes on, in chameleon fashion, the character of a violin, a flute, and even a mandolin. Debussy was developing in this work ideas of an earlier period, those expressed in a youthful play he had written, Frères en art (Brothers in Art), where his challenging, indeed anarchical, ideas are discussed among musicians, painters, and poets. (He had in fact published in one of the anarchist journals poems that he had written and that he later set to music in the song cycle Proses lyriques.)

Pour les arpèges composés

Pour les arpèges composés looks, with its festoons of extended arpeggios expressed as small notes, somewhat Lisztian on the printed page, though its total effect is typical Debussyan. At first slower-moving broken-chords, compounded of never less than five different notes of the diatonic scale, are beautifully liquid in effect. The more rapid arpeggios can be anything from romantically lacy to sharply abrupt and, as so often in the studies, they - the technical raison d’etre of the piece - prove to be a framework for sustained and sharply melody. Arpeggios exist only as gruppetti in the middle section, which has again all the character of a music-hall parody. Rhythmic fragments from this section together with a few wayward arpeggios, scraps of the sustained melody and of the broken-chord from the very opening, are bundled together in a remarkable little coda.

Let's listen to the piece by Horowitz

Debussy "Imagination, Symbolism, Changes in Musical Perspective"

For me, Debussy’s  music style can creates charm playing with sound effects or color. I think Debussy stands out on imagination because he has an imagination from the mixing of different styles of music and art together. Debussy tried to use the sound of music to explore something or some picture, but of course everything standing in the same thing is “Imagination”.

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