Dictionary Definition
Ravel
Noun
1 French composer and exponent of Impressionsim
(1875-1937) [syn: Maurice
Ravel]
Verb
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -ævəl
Verb
- To pull apart (especially cloth or a seam); unravel.
- To clarify by separation into simpler pieces.
Extensive Definition
Joseph-Maurice Ravel (March 7, 1875 –
December
28, 1937)
was a
Basque French composer and pianist of Impressionist
and Expressionist
music, known especially for the subtlety, richness and poignancy of
his melodies and of his orchestral and instrumental textures and
effects. His piano music,
chamber
music, vocal music
and orchestral
music have become staples of the concert repertoire.
Ravel's piano compositions, such as Jeux
d'eau, Miroirs and
Gaspard de la Nuit, demand considerable virtuosity from
the performer, and his orchestral music,
including Daphnis
et Chloé and his arrangement of Modest
Mussorgsky's
Pictures at an Exhibition, uses tonal color and variety of
sound and instrumentation
very effectively.
To the general public, Ravel is probably best
known for his orchestral work, Boléro, which
he considered trivial and once described as "a piece for orchestra
without music."
According to
SACEM, Ravel's estate earns more royalties than that of any
other French musician. According to international copyright law,
Ravel's works are public
domain since January 1
2008 in most
countries, even though it has been stated that they will not enter
the public domain until 2015.
Biography
Early life
Ravel was born in Ciboure, France, near Biarritz. His mother, Marie Delouart, was French, while his father, Joseph Ravel, was a Swiss inventor and industrialist. Some of the father's inventions were quite important, including an early internal-combustion engine and a notorious circus machine, the "Whirlwind of Death," an automotive loop-the-loop that was quite a hit in the early 1900s. After the family moved to Paris, Ravel's younger brother Édouard was born. At age seven, young Maurice began piano lessons and, five or six years later, began composing. His parents encouraged his musical pursuits and sent him to the Conservatoire de Paris, first as a preparatory student and eventually as a piano major. During the first few years of the 1900s, Ravel joined with a number of innovative young artists who were referred to as the "Apaches" (hooligans).He studied composition at the Conservatoire under
Gabriel
Fauré for a remarkable fourteen years. During his years at the
Conservatoire, Ravel tried numerous times to win the prestigious
Prix
de Rome, but to no avail. After a scandal involving his loss of
the prize in 1905 (to Victor Gallois — Ravel had been considered
the favorite to win), Ravel left the Conservatoire. The incident
—named the "Ravel Affair" by the Parisian press
— also led to the resignation of the Conservatoire's
director, Théodore
Dubois.
Work with Diaghilev
Ravel later worked with impresario Sergei Diaghilev who staged Ma Mère l'Oye and Daphnis et Chloé. The latter was commissioned by Diaghilev with the lead danced by the great Vaslav Nijinsky. In 1920, the French government awarded him the Légion d'honneur, but Ravel refused. Soon, he retired to the French countryside where he continued to write music, albeit less prolifically.Diaghilev commissioned Ravel to write La Valse (1920),
originally named Wien (Vienna), and Ravel was hurt by the fact that
Diaghilev never used the composition. When the two men met again in
1925, Ravel refused to shake Diaghilev's hand, and Diaghilev
challenged Ravel to a duel
(friends talked Diaghilev out of it). The men never met
again.
In 1928, Ravel made a concert tour in America. In
New
York City, he received a moving standing ovation which he
remarked was unlike any of his underwhelming premieres in Paris. He
traveled as far west as San
Francisco, where he conducted a concert of his orchestral
music. That same year, Oxford
University awarded him an honorary doctorate. He also met
George
Gershwin and the two became friends. Ravel's admiration of
American jazz led him to
include some jazz elements in a few of his later compositions,
especially the two piano concertos.
Ravel is not known to have had any intimate
relationships. Many of his friends have suggested that Ravel was
known to frequent the bordellos of Paris, but the issue
of his sexuality remains largely a mystery. Rumors have surfaced
from time to time that Ravel was homosexual, possibly because of
his association with Diaghilev. No factual (or reliably anecdotal)
evidence has ever been found to substantiate this rumor. Ravel made
a remark at one time suggesting that because he was such a
perfectionist composer, so devoted to his work, that he could never
have a lasting intimate relationship with anyone.
Although he considered his small stature and
light weight an advantage to becoming an aviator, during the
First
World War Ravel was not allowed to enlist as a pilot because of
his age and weak health. Instead, upon his enlistment, he became a
truck driver. He named his truck "Adelaide". Most references to
what he drove in the war indicate it was an artillery truck or
generic truck. No primary
source mentions him driving an ambulance.
His few students included Maurice
Delage, Manuel
Rosenthal, Ralph
Vaughan Williams, and Vlado
Perlemuter.
Ravel made one of his few recordings when he
conducted his Boléro with the
Lamoureux
Orchestra in 1930. He also made a number of recordings of his
piano music. Ravel reportedly conducted a group of Parisian
musicians following the world premiere of his second piano
concerto, the Concerto in G, with Marguerite
Long, who had been the soloist in the premiere. EMI later
reissued the 1932 recording on LP and CD. Although Ravel was listed
as the conductor on the original 78-rpm discs, this is now disputed
and it is possible he merely supervised the recording.
Illness and death
In 1932 Ravel sustained a blow to the head in a taxi accident. The injury was considered minor, but soon thereafter he began to complain of aphasia-like symptoms similar to Pick's disease. He had begun work on music for a film version of Don Quixote (1933) featuring the Russian bass Feodor Chaliapin and directed by G. W. Pabst. When Ravel became unable to compose, and could not write down the musical ideas he heard in his mind, Pabst hired Jacques Ibert. On 8 April 2008, the New York Times published an article saying Ravel may have been in the early stages of frontotemporal dementia in 1928, and this might account for the repetitive nature of Boléro. This is in line with an earlier article, published in a journal of neurology, that closely examines Ravel's clinical history and argues that his works Boléro and Piano Concerto for the Left Hand both indicate the impacts of neurological disease.In late 1937 Ravel consented to experimental
brain surgery. One hemisphere of his brain was re-inflated with
serous
fluid. He awoke from the surgery, called for his brother
Edouard, lapsed into a coma
and died shortly afterwards. He is buried in Levallois-Perret, a
suburb of northwest
Paris.
Musical style
Ravel considered himself in many ways a classicist. He relied on traditional forms and structures as ways of presenting his new and innovative harmonies. He often masked the sections of his structure with transitions that disguised the beginnings of the motif. This is apparent in his Valses nobles et sentimentales — inspired by Franz Schubert's collections, Valses nobles and Valses sentimentales — where the seven movements begin and end without pause, and in his chamber music where many movements are in sonata-allegro form, hiding the change from developmental sections to recapitulation.Though Ravel's music has tonal centers, it was
innovative for the time period. In keeping with the French school
pioneered by Chabrier,
Satie,
and Debussy
(to name a few), Ravel's melodies are almost exclusively modal.
Instead of using major or minor for his predominant harmonic
language, he preferred modes with major or minor flavors – for
example the Mixolydian,
with its lowered leading tone, instead of major, and the Aeolian
instead of harmonic minor. As a result, there are virtually no
leading
tones in his output. Melodically, he tended to favor two modes:
the Dorian and
the Phrygian.
He was in no way dependent on the modes exclusively; he used
extended harmonies and intricate modulations outside the realm of
traditional modal practices. Ravel was fond of chords of the ninth
and eleventh, and the acidity of his harmonies is largely the
result of a fondness for unresolved appoggiaturas (listen to
the Valses nobles et sentimentales). His piano music, some of which
is noted for its technical challenges (for example Gaspard de la
nuit), was an extension of Lisztian virtuosity. Even his most
difficult pieces, however, are marked by elegance and refinement.
He was inspired by various dances, his favorite being the minuet. Other forms from which
Ravel drew material include the forlane, rigaudon, waltz,
czardas, habanera,
passacaglia, and the
boléro.
Ravel has almost always been considered one of
the two great French impressionist
composers, the other being Debussy. In reality Ravel is much more
than an Impressionist (it is worth noting that both Ravel and
Debussy rejected this description of their styles). For example, he
made extensive use of rollicking jazz tunes in his Piano
Concerto in G, even employing a whiplash for special effects in
the first and second movements. Ravel also imitates Pablo de
Sarasate's late-Romantic
virtuoso style in Tzigane.
In his A la maniere de...Borodine (In the manner of...Borodine),
Ravel plays with the ability to both mimic and remain original. In
a more complex situation, A la maniere de...Emmanuel Chabrier
/Paraphrase sur un air de Gounod ("Faust IIème acte"), Ravel takes
on a theme from Gounod's Faust and
arranges it in the style of Emmanuel
Chabrier. Even in writing in the style of others, Ravel's own
voice as a composer remained distinct.
Ravel had very meticulously crafted manuscripts.
Unfortunately, early printed editions of his works were prone to
errors. Painstakingly, he worked with his publisher, Durand, in
correcting them. In a letter, Ravel wrote that when proofing
L'enfant et les sortilèges, after many other editors had proofread
the opera, he could still find ten errors per page. Each piece was
carefully crafted, although Ravel wished that, like the historical
composers he admired, he could write a great quantity of works.
Igor
Stravinsky once referred to Ravel as the "Swiss Watchmaker", a
reference to the intricacy and precision of Ravel's works.
A great example of the detail of Ravel's works
can be found in "Une Barque Sur L'Ocean," one of his piano pieces
from the set Miroirs; in the piece one finds harmonies representing
waves in different quantities that are meticulously numbered. For
example, one arpeggio in the left hand will appear three times the
first time, and two times the next. Each time, the quantity of
arpeggios is thought out and deliberate, with the general trend of
reducing the number of arpeggios in subsequent repeats, perhaps
with a consciousness that the listener will more quickly recognize
the pattern the second time it appears.
Musical Influence
Active in a period of great artistic innovations
and diversification, Ravel benefited from many influences, though
his music defies any facile classification. As
Vladimir Jankélévitch notes in his biography, "no influence can
claim to have conquered him entirely […]. Ravel remains ungraspable
behind all these masks which the snobbery of the century has
attempted to impose." Ravel's musical language was ultimately
highly original, neither absolutely modernist nor impressionist. Like
Debussy, Ravel categorically refused this description which he
believed was reserved exclusively for painting.
Nonetheless, Ravel was very open to influences
and was a remarkable synthesist of disparate styles. Certain
aspects of his music can be considered to fall into the lineage of
18th century French
classicism beginning with Couperin and
Rameau as in
Le tombeau de Couperin. The uniquely 19th century French
sensibilities of Fauré and
Chabrier
are reflected in Sérénade grotesque, Pavane pour une infante
défunte, and Menuet antique, while pieces such as Jeux d’eau, and
the String Quartet owe something to the innovations of Satie and Debussy. The
virtuosity and poetry of Gaspard de la nuit and Concerto pour la
main gauche hint at Liszt and Chopin. His
admiration and interest in American jazz is echoed in L’Enfant et les
sortilèges, Sonate pour violon and the Piano
Concerto in G, while the Russian school of music inspired
homage in In the style of Borodin and the
orchestration of
Pictures at an Exhibition. He variously cited Mozart,
Saint-Saëns, Schubert and Schönberg as inspirations for various
pieces.
Ravel wrote, in 1928, that composers should be
aware of both individual and national consciousness. That year,
Ravel had toured the United
States and Canada by train
performing piano recitals
in the great concert halls of twenty-five cities. In their
reluctance to take jazz and
blues as a nationalistic
style of music, he stated
American composers' "greatest fear is to find themselves
confronted by mysterious urges to break academic rules rather than
belie individual consciousness. Thereupon
these musicians, good bourgeois as they are, compose their music
according to the classical rules of the European epoch."
There is a story that when American composer
George
Gershwin met Ravel, he mentioned that he would have liked to
study with the French composer, if that were
possible. (Generally, Ravel did not take students.) According to
Gershwin, the Frenchman retorted, "Why do you want to become a
second-rate Ravel when you are already a first-rate Gershwin?"The
second part of the story has Ravel asking Gershwin how much money
he made. Upon hearing Gershwin's reply, Ravel suggested that maybe
he should study with Gershwin. (This tale may well be apocryphal:
Gershwin seems also to have told a near-identical story about a
conversation with Arnold
Schoenberg, some have claimed it was with Igor
Stravinsky; see the Wikipedia article for George
Gershwin.) In any event, this had to have been before Ravel
wrote Boléro which
became financially very successful for him. He intended to write an
earlier concerto, Zazpiak
Bat, but it was never finished. The title reflects his Basque
heritage: meaning 'The Seven Are One', it refers to the seven
Basque regions, and was a motto often used in connection with the
idea of a Basque nation. Surviving notes and fragments also confirm
that this naturally was to be heavily influenced by Basque music.
Instead, Ravel abandoned the piece, using its nationalistic themes
and rhythms in some of his other pieces.
Ravel commented that André
Gédalge, his professor of counterpoint, was very
important in the development of his skill as a composer. As an
orchestrator, Ravel studied the ability of each instrument
carefully in order to determine the possible effects. This may
account for the success of his orchestral transcriptions, both of
his own piano works and those of other composers, such as Mussorgsky,
Debussy and
Schumann.
Notable compositions
- Menuet antique (piano, 1895, orchestrated in 1929)
- Shéhérazade (ouverture de féerie) (1897)
- Pavane pour une infante défunte ("Pavane for a dead infanta") (piano 1899, orchestra 1910)
- Jeux d'eau (piano, 1901)
- String Quartet in F major (1903)
- Shéhérazade (orchestral song cycle, 1903) Setting poems by his friend Tristan Klingsor
- Sonatina (piano, 1903-1905)
- Introduction and allegro (pedal harp, flute, clarinet, string quartet, 1905)
- Miroirs
("Reflections"): Noctuelles ("Night moths"), Oiseaux tristes ("Sad
birds"), Alborada del Gracioso ("Dawn song of the jester"), Une
barque sur l'océan ("A boat on the ocean"), La vallée des cloches
("Valley of the bells") (piano 1905)
- III. Une barque sur l'océan (orchestra 1906)
- IV. Alborada del gracioso (orchestra 1918)
- Histoires naturelles ("Tales from nature") (song cycle for voice and piano, text by Jules Renard, 1906)
- Rapsodie espagnole ("Spanish Rhapsody") (orchestra, 1907)
- L'heure espagnole ("The Spanish Hour") (opera, 1907–1909)
- Gaspard de la nuit ("Demons of the night") (piano, 1908)
- Ma Mère l'Oye ("Mother Goose") (piano duet 1908–1910, ballet 1911)
- Daphnis et Chloé ("Daphnis and Chloé") (ballet, 1909–1912)
- Trois Poèmes de Stéphane Mallarmé, (voice, piano, flute/piccolo, clarinet/bass clarinet and string quartet, 1913)
- Valses nobles et sentimentales ("Noble and Sentimental Waltzes") (piano 1911, orchestra 1912)
- Piano Trio in A minor (1914)
- Le Tombeau de Couperin ("Tombeau for Couperin"): I. Prelude, II. Fugue, III. Forlane, IV. Rigaudon, V. Minuet, VI. Toccata (piano 1914–1917), (I, III, IV and V, orchestra 1919)
- Sonata for Violin and Cello
- Sonata for Violin and Piano
- La Valse (choreographic poem, 1906–1914 and 1919–1920)
- Chansons Madécasses ("Songs of Madagascar") (voice, flute, cello and piano, text by Evariste Parny, 1926)
- L'enfant et les sortilèges ("The Child and the Spells", lyric fantasy, 1920–1925, libretto by Colette 1917)
- Tzigane (violin and piano, 1924)
- Fanfare (1927; for the children's ballet L'Éventail de Jeanne, to which ten French composers each contributed a dance)
- Boléro (ballet, 1928)
- Piano Concerto for the Left Hand in D (1929–1930) Composed for pianist Paul Wittgenstein, who lost his right arm in WWI. Wittgenstein was the brother of philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein.
- Piano Concerto in G (1929–1931)
- Don Quichotte à Dulcinée ("Serenade of Don Quixote to Dulcinea") (voice and piano, 1932–1933)
Media
Media Depictions
Canadian filmmaker Larry Weinstein has produced two documentaries about Ravel, Ravel (1987) and Ravel's Brain (2001). The second of these two films dramatizes the musician's illness and death.References
- The Cambridge Companion to Ravel (Cambridge Companions to Music) Publisher: Cambridge University Press (August 24, 2000) ISBN 0-521-64856-4
- Maurice Ravel: a Life by Benjamin Ivry, Publisher: Welcome Rain (2000) ISBN 0-156-649152-5
- "Maurice Ravel." Contemporary Musicians, Volume 25. Gale Group, 1999. Reproduced in Biography Resource Center. Farmington Hills, Mich.: Thomson Gale. 2005.
- Maurice Ravel, Gerald Larner, Phaidon Press, London, 1996
Notes
External links
Free Scores
- www.kreusch-sheet-music.net - Free Scores by Ravel
Miscalleneous
- http://www.maurice-ravel.net/
- Epitonic.com: Maurice Ravel featuring a track from Miroirs and Gaspard De La Nuit
- Biography of Maurice Ravel
- Analysis of Ravel's Trio
- Classic Cat - Ravel - Free Ravel music.
- TheGuardian: Poor Ravel Where Ravel's Copyright profits are going. Until 2015.
ravel in Aragonese: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Asturian: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Breton: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Bulgarian: Морис Равел
ravel in Catalan: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Cebuano: Ravel
ravel in Czech: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Welsh: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Danish: Maurice Ravel
ravel in German: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Estonian: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Spanish: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Esperanto: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Basque: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Persian: موریس راول
ravel in French: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Galician: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Korean: 모리스 라벨
ravel in Croatian: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Ido: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Italian: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Hebrew: מוריס ראוול
ravel in Luxembourgish: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Lithuanian: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Hungarian: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Dutch: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Japanese: モーリス・ラヴェル
ravel in Norwegian: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Norwegian Nynorsk: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Occitan (post 1500): Maurice
Ravel
ravel in Piemontese: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Low German: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Polish: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Portuguese: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Romanian: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Russian: Равель, Морис
ravel in Simple English: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Slovak: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Slovenian: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Serbian: Морис Равел
ravel in Serbo-Croatian: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Finnish: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Swedish: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Turkish: Maurice Ravel
ravel in Ukrainian: Равель Моріс Жозеф
ravel in Chinese: 乔瑟夫-莫里斯·拉威尔
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Chinese puzzle, Gordian knot, Rube Goldberg
contraption, answer, ball
up, bottom, can of worms,
clarify, clear up,
complex, complicate, confound, confuse, crack, debug, decipher, decode, disembroil, disentangle, disintricate, disinvolve, divine, do, dope, dope out, embrangle, entangle, explain, fathom, figure out, find out,
find the answer, find the solution, foul up, get, get right, guess, guess right, have it, hit
it, implicate,
interpret, involve, jungle, knot, labyrinth, louse up, make out,
maze, meander, mesh, mess, mess up, mix up, muck, muck up, muddle, open the lock, perplex, plumb, psych, psych out, puzzle out,
ramify, ravel out,
resolve, riddle, screw up, snafu, snake pit, snarl, snarl up, solve, sort out, tangle, tangled skein, unbraid, unclutter, uncoil, undo, unknot, unlock, unmix, unravel, unriddle, unscramble, unsnarl, untangle, unthread, untwine, untwist, unweave, unwind, webwork, wheels within wheels,
wilderness, work, work out