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#2017724 - 01/20/13 08:55 AM
La Mer by Debussy
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4000 Post Club Member
Registered: 01/21/04
Posts: 4027
Loc: Pretoria South Africa
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20 January 2013 'LA MER' by Claude Debussy from “The Dent CONCERTGOER’S COMPANION” by Antony Hopkins
Have any of you chaps heard the first movement of La Mer as sensitively described by Antony Hopkins ... well worth having the blurb in hand while listening to the score ... (interestingly the impassioned grunts of Toscanini can be heard in the background)
1st Movement 'De l'aube a midi sur la mer' (duration - 8.05 - Conductor:A.Toscanini ) 0:00 The movement begins as quietly as possible; harps set up a gentle alternation of adjacent notes (F#-G#) which are then given a little rhythmic flick by muted cellos. 0:28 It scarcely seems important enough to be called a theme but its rhythm is like a signature which appears a number of times whether the paired notes are rising or falling. 0:38 Violas have a slow ascent based on rising fourths which prompts a high shimmer en violins like the first tentative streak of sunlight in the grey dawn-mist. 0:48 The 'rhythmic flick' appears several times in various woodwind instruments; muted trumpet and cor anglais in unison offer a longer phrase, easily recognised by the five repeated notes with which it begins. 1:15 A long descent through the strings leads to a slightly more animated section in which the 'rising fourths' phrase gathers momentum. 1:43 Daylight breaks through as second violins and violas begin a rippling figure which certainly depicts the surface of the water stirred into motion by a gentle breeze. 2:10 Cellos have a continuously reiterated pattern not unlike the one that Mendelssohn uses so effectively in the 'Hebrides' overture. 2:26 Above these repeated wavelets four muted horns have a long melancholy-theme whose modal scale gives it a hint of plainsong. 2:42 Debussy has the habit of throwing fragmentary themes into the score so that as we listen we may find it difficult to gauge their ultimate importance - a plaintive tune for oboe and solo cello in unison, a swift rise and fall on a flute that suggests the flight of a bird skimming over the waves. 3:10 But as the strength of the breeze clearly increases, the 'plainsong' theme in the horns becomes more prominent while glittering figures in the woodwind suggest the white crests of the waves sparkling in the sun. 3:51 There is a momentary lull 4.10 Before a remarkable passage for cellos, divided into four parts - Debussy specifies sixteen players. Their energetic new theme, starting with the 'rhythmic flick' from the introduction, soon spreads to other sections of the orchestra. 4:38 First the woodwind and then, more powerfully , woodwind and horns. 5.02 Meanwhile the waves gather force unmistakably as the strings pound out an exciting repetitive rhythm. 5:20 A gradual diminuendo tells us that the wind is losing its edge though the water remains choppy. 5:35 Cor anglais and trumpet recall the theme from the introduction, the one with five repeated notes to begin with; skilfully Debussy reintroduces other fragments from the opening pages, clearly recognisable to us now. 6:05 A patch of haze (cor anglais and cello in unison against sustained string harmonies) leads us to suppose that the movement will end quietly. 7:13 But suddenly the mist is dispersed - 7:26 by a glorious blaze of sunlight as the full brass lend their weight to the orchestral mass.
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#2017809 - 01/20/13 12:38 PM
Re: La Mer by Debussy
[Re: btb]
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2000 Post Club Member
Registered: 10/14/10
Posts: 2763
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Wasn't it Erik Satie who said that he particularly liked the bit at a quarter to twelve (11.45 am in new money) in the first movement ('From dawn to midday on the sea')? Me, I prefer the bit at 11.23 am  .
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#2018098 - 01/21/13 12:35 AM
Re: La Mer by Debussy
[Re: btb]
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Yikes! 10000 Post Club Member
Registered: 06/07/03
Posts: 18726
Loc: Oakland
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I like the part where the grunion are running.
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#2018111 - 01/21/13 01:14 AM
Re: La Mer by Debussy
[Re: btb]
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Yikes! 10000 Post Club Member
Registered: 06/07/03
Posts: 18726
Loc: Oakland
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Grunion are uncommon around here, but they do occur in the northern part of the state, and the ocean water here is probably colder than any ocean water around France.
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