Frogtoon Music

Boléro by Maurice Ravel

Artist Biography For Maurice Ravel

Maurice Ravel In Full Joseph-Maurice Ravel 7th March 1875 Ciboure France–28th December 1937 Paris Was A French Composer Of Swiss-Basque Descent Noted For His Musical Craftsmanship And Perfection Of Form And Style In Such Works As Boléro 1928 Pavane Pour Une Infante Défunte 1899 Pavane For A Dead Princess Rapsodie Espagnole 1907 The Ballet Daphnis Et Chloé First Performed 1912 And The Opera L’Enfant Et Les Sortilèges 1925 The Child And The Enchantments . Ravel Was Born In A Village Near Saint-Jean-De-Luz France Of A Swiss Father And A Basque Mother. His Family Background Was An Artistic And Cultivated One And The Young Maurice Received Every Encouragement From His Father When His Talent For Music Became Apparent At An Early Age. In 1889 At 14 He Entered The Paris Conservatoire Where He Remained Until 1905. During This Period He Composed Some Of His Best Known Works Including The Pavane For A Dead Princess The Sonatine For Piano And The String Quartet. All These Works Especially The Two Latter Show The Astonishing Early Perfection Of Style And Craftsmanship That Are The Hallmarks Of Ravel’s Entire Oeuvre. He Is One Of The Rare Composers Whose Early Works Seem Scarcely Less Mature Than Those Of His Maturity. Indeed His Failure At The Conservatoire After Three Attempts To Win The Coveted Prix De Rome For Composition The Works He Submitted Were Judged Too “advanced” By Ultra-Conservative Members Of The Jury Caused Something Of A Scandal. Indignant Protests Were Published And Liberal-Minded Musicians And Writers Including The Musicologist And Novelist Romain Rolland Supported Ravel. As A Result The Director Of The Conservatoire Théodore Dubois Was Forced To Resign And His Place Was Taken By The Composer Gabriel Fauré With Whom Ravel Had Studied Composition. Ravel Was In No Sense A Revolutionary Musician. He Was For The Most Part Content To Work Within The Established Formal And Harmonic Conventions Of His Day Still Firmly Rooted In Tonality—i.E. The Organization Of Music Around Focal Tones. Yet So Very Personal And Individual Was His Adaptation And Manipulation Of The Traditional Musical Idiom That It Would Be True To Say He Forged For Himself A Language Of His Own That Bears The Stamp Of His Personality As Unmistakably As Any Work Of Bach Or Chopin. While His Melodies Are Almost Always Modal I.E. Based Not On The Conventional Western Diatonic Scale But On The Old Greek Phrygian And Dorian Modes His Harmonies Derive Their Often Somewhat Acid Flavour From His Fondness For “added” Notes And Unresolved Appoggiaturas Or Notes Extraneous To The Chord That Are Allowed To Remain Harmonically Unresolved. He Enriched The Literature Of The Piano By A Series Of Masterworks Ranging From The Early Jeux D’eau Completed 1901 And The Miroirs Of 1905 To The Formidable Gaspard De La Nuit 1908 Le Tombeau De Couperin 1917 And The Two Piano Concerti 1931 . Of His Purely Orchestral Works The Rapsodie Espagnole And Boléro Are The Best Known And Reveal His Consummate Mastery Of The Art Of Instrumentation. But Perhaps The Highlights Of His Career Were His Collaboration With The Russian Impresario Serge Diaghilev For Whose Ballets Russes He Composed The Masterpiece Daphnis Et Chloé And With The French Writer Colette Who Was The Librettist Of His Best Known Opera L’Enfant Et Les Sortilèges. The Latter Work Gave Ravel An Opportunity Of Doing Ingenious And Amusing Things With The Animals And Inanimate Objects That Come To Life In This Tale Of Bewitchment And Magic In Which A Naughty Child Is Involved. His Only Other Operatic Venture Had Been His Brilliantly Satirical L’Heure Espagnole First Performed 1911 . As A Songwriter Ravel Achieved Great Distinction With His Imaginative Histoires Naturelles Trois Poèmes De Stéphane Mallarmé And Chansons Madécasses. Ravel’s Life Was In The Main Uneventful. He Never Married And Though He Enjoyed The Society Of A Few Chosen Friends He Lived The Life Of A Semi-Recluse At His Country Retreat At Montfort-L’Amaury In The Forest Of Rambouillet Near Paris. He Served In World War I For A Short Time As A Truck Driver At The Front But The Strain Was Too Great For His Fragile Constitution And He Was Discharged From The Army In 1917. In 1928 Ravel Embarked On A Four Months’ Tour Of Canada And The United States And In The Same Year Visited England To Receive An Honorary Degree Of Doctor Of Music From Oxford. That Year Also Saw The Creation Of Boléro In Its Original Form As A Ballet With Ida Rubinstein In The Principal Role. The Last Five Years Of Ravel’s Life Were Clouded By Aphasia Which Not Only Prevented Him From Writing Another Note Of Music But Also Deprived Him Of The Power Of Speech And Made It Impossible For Him Even To Sign His Name. Perhaps The Real Tragedy Of His Condition Was That His Musical Imagination Remained As Active As Ever. An Operation To Relieve The Obstruction Of A Blood Vessel That Supplies The Brain Was Unsuccessful. Ravel Was Buried In The Cemetery Of Levallois A Paris Suburb In Which He Had Lived In The Presence Of Stravinsky And Other Distinguished Musicians And Composers. For Ravel Music Was A Kind Of Ritual Having Its Own Laws To Be Conducted Behind High Walls Sealed Off From The Outside World And Impenetrable To Unauthorized Intruders. When His Russian Contemporary Igor Stravinsky Compared Ravel To “the Most Perfect Of Swiss Watchmakers ” He Was In Fact Extolling Those Qualities Of Intricacy And Precision To Which He Himself Attached So Much Importance.

Frogtoon Music - Song Info: Boléro

Boléro Is A One-Movement Orchestral Piece By Maurice Ravel. Originally Composed As A Ballet Commissioned By Russian Ballerina Ida Rubenstein The Piece Which Premiered In 1928 Is Ravel's Most Famous Musical Composition. Boléro Is "Ravel's Most Straightforward Composition In Any Medium". The Music Is Built Over An Unchanging Ostinato Rhythm Played On One Or More Snare Drums That Remains Constant Throughout The Piece.
On Top Of This Rhythm Is Repeated A Single Theme Consisting Of Two Eighteen-Bar Sections Each Itself Repeated Twice. Tension Is Provided By The Contrast Between The Steady Percussive Rhythm And The "expressive Vocal Melody Trying To Break Free". Interest Is Maintained By Constant Reorchestration Of The Theme Leading To A Variety Of Timbres And By A Steady Crescendo. The Melody Is Passed Among Different Instruments 1 Flute 2 Clarinet 3 Bassoon 4 E-Flat Clarinet 5 Oboe D'amore 6 Trumpet With Flute Not Heard Clearly And In Higher Octave Than The First Part 7 Tenor Saxophone 8 Soprano Saxophone 9 Horn Piccolos And Celesta 10 Oboe English Horn And Clarinet 11 Trombone 12 Some Of The Wind Instruments 13 First Violins And Some Wind Instruments 14 First And Second Violins Together With Some Wind Instruments 15 Violins And Some Of The Wind Instruments 16 Some Instruments In The Orchestra 17 And Finally Most But Not All The Instruments In The Orchestra With Bass Drum Cymbals And Tam-Tam . While The Melody Continues To Be Played In C Throughout From The Middle Onwards Other Instruments Double It In Different Keys. The First Such Doubling Involves A Horn Playing The Melody In C While A Celeste Doubles It 2 And 3 Octaves Above And Two Piccolos Play The Melody In The Keys Of G And E Respectively. This Functions As A Reinforcement Of The 1st 2nd 3rd And 4th Overtones Of Each Note Of The Melody. The Other Significant "key Doubling" Involves Sounding The Melody A 5th Above Or A 4th Below In G Major. Other Than These "key Doublings" Ravel Simply Harmonizes The Melody Using Diatonic Chords. The Accompaniment Becomes Gradually Thicker And Louder Until The Whole Orchestra Is Playing At The Very End. Just Before The End There Is A Sudden Change Of Key To E Major Though C Major Is Reestablished After Just Eight Bars. Six Bars From The End The Bass Drum Cymbals And Tam-Tam Make Their First Entry The English Horn Returns And The Trombones And Both Saxophones Play Raucous Glissandi While The Whole Orchestra Beats Out The Rhythm That Has Been Played On The Snare Drum From The Very First Bar. Finally The Work Descends From A Dissonant D-Flat Chord To A C Major Chord.

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