Introduction and Allegro for Harp, Flute, Clarinet and String Quartet (french: Introduction et allegro pour harpe, flûte, clarinette et quatuor) is a
chamber work by
Maurice Ravel
Joseph Maurice Ravel (7 March 1875 – 28 December 1937) was a French composer, pianist and conductor. He is often associated with Impressionism along with his elder contemporary Claude Debussy, although both composers rejected the term. In ...
. It is a short piece, typically lasting between ten and eleven minutes in performance. It was commissioned in 1905 by the
Érard harp manufacturers to showcase their instruments, and has been described as a miniature harp concerto. The premiere was in Paris on 22 February 1907.
The work has been arranged for piano and for large orchestral forces but the version for seven instruments is usually performed, and has been recorded many times. Harpists who have featured in recordings include
Lily Laskine,
Nicanor Zabaleta,
Osian Ellis Osian or Osiyan may refer to:
* Osian art fund, an arts fund started in Mumbai (2010).
* Osian, Jodhpur, a city in Rajasthan, India
*Osiyan, Unnao, a village in Unnao district, Uttar Pradesh, India
*Osian (name), a name common in Wales, derived fro ...
,
Markus Klinko,
Lavinia Meijer and
Marie-Pierre Langlamet.
Background
To showcase its new
chromatic harp, the
Pleyel company commissioned
Claude Debussy
(Achille) Claude Debussy (; 22 August 1862 – 25 March 1918) was a French composer. He is sometimes seen as the first Impressionism in music, Impressionist composer, although he vigorously rejected the term. He was among the most infl ...
in 1904 to write his ''
Danses sacrée et profane'' for harp and orchestra. The rival
Érard company responded by commissioning
Maurice Ravel
Joseph Maurice Ravel (7 March 1875 – 28 December 1937) was a French composer, pianist and conductor. He is often associated with Impressionism along with his elder contemporary Claude Debussy, although both composers rejected the term. In ...
to write a piece to display the expressive range of its double-action pedal harp.
[
Ravel completed his Introduction and Allegro for a septet of harp, flute, clarinet and ]string quartet
The term string quartet can refer to either a type of musical composition or a group of four people who play them. Many composers from the mid-18th century onwards wrote string quartets. The associated musical ensemble consists of two violinist ...
in June 1905, dedicating it to Albert Blondel, director of Maison Érard.[Orenstein (2003), p. 68] For Ravel, composition was generally slow and painstaking, but he wrote the Introduction and Allegro at what for him was breakneck speed, to complete it before embarking on a boating holiday with friends. He wrote at the time:
Premiere and early performances
The premiere was given on 22 February 1907 at an all-Ravel concert presented by the Cercle Musical at the Hôtel de la Société française de photographie in Paris. The players were Micheline Kahn (harp), Philippe Gaubert (flute), Ernest Pichard (clarinet), and the Quartet Firmin Touche; the performance was conducted by Charles Domergue.[Orenstein (2014), p. 226]
The British premiere was on 4 September 1907 at a Henry Wood Promenade concert, with Alfred Kastner as harp soloist. Ravel later conducted the work in Britain, first at the Bechstein Hall, London, in December 1913, with Gwendolen Mason as harpist, and in concerts of his works at both the Aeolian Hall, London and the town hall, Oxford
Oxford () is a city in England. It is the county town and only city of Oxfordshire. In 2020, its population was estimated at 151,584. It is north-west of London, south-east of Birmingham and north-east of Bristol. The city is home to the Un ...
in October 1928.
The American premiere was at Aeolian Hall in New York on 3 December 1916 in a concert featuring the harpist Carlos Salzedo, who gave the American premiere of Debussy's ''Danses sacrée et profane'' in the same programme. At the first performance in Australia, at the Conservatorium Hall, Sydney, in November 1917, the piece was so enthusiastically received that it had to be immediately repeated.
Music
The full title of the work in the published score gives primacy to the harp: "Introduction et Allegro pour Harpe avec accompagnement de Quatuor à Cordes, Flûte et Clarinette". Although some commentators have emphasised the chamber nature of the piece, and challenged the view of it as a concertante
Sinfonia concertante (; also called ''symphonie concertante'') is an orchestral work, normally in several movements, in which one or more solo instruments contrast with the full orchestra.Collins: ''Encyclopedia of Music'', William Collins Sons & C ...
work, the Ravel scholar Arbie Orenstein Arbie Orenstein (born 1937) is an American musicologist, author, academic and pianist, known as a scholar of the life and works of the composer Maurice Ravel and, more generally, as an expert on Jewish music.
Life and career
Orenstein was born in ...
writes, "Ravel apparently wished to stress the privileged position of the harp, and the composition should thus be considered a miniature harp concerto rather than a septet".
Structure
The work is in G-flat major
G-flat major (or the key of G-flat) is a major scale based on G, consisting of the pitches G, A, B, C, D, E, and F. Its key signature has six flats.
Its relative minor is E-flat minor (or enharmonically D-sharp minor), and its par ...
.[ It typically plays for between ten and eleven minutes. The opening is marked ''Très lent'' and ''expressif'', the metronome mark is ♩ =40, and the time is .][Ravel, p. 3] The 26-bar
Bar or BAR may refer to:
Food and drink
* Bar (establishment), selling alcoholic beverages
* Candy bar
* Chocolate bar
Science and technology
* Bar (river morphology), a deposit of sediment
* Bar (tropical cyclone), a layer of cloud
* Bar (un ...
introduction presents three themes – the first two for woodwinds and the third for cello – which reappear in the allegro. The piece opens with a pianissimo duet for the flute and clarinet. The strings enter in the third bar, pianissimo, and the harp enters in the fourth with a wide-ranging arpeggio.[
The cello introduces a broad melody against the shimmering pianissimo of the violins, flute, and clarinet. After ten bars the time changes to and the marking to ''moins lent''. The movement becomes faster and louder, and subsides to pianissimo again, bringing the introduction to its conclusion.][Slonimsky, pp. 497–498]
The allegro, in sonata form
Sonata form (also ''sonata-allegro form'' or ''first movement form'') is a musical structure generally consisting of three main sections: an exposition, a development, and a recapitulation. It has been used widely since the middle of the 18th c ...
, follows without a break.[Orenstein (2014), p. 162] It opens with a harp solo. The flute takes up the melody, to the accompaniment of the violins pizzicato
Pizzicato (, ; translated as "pinched", and sometimes roughly as "plucked") is a playing technique that involves plucking the strings of a string instrument. The exact technique varies somewhat depending on the type of instrument :
* On bowe ...
and the other strings arco. The melody is passed from one instrument to another; the music gradually grows louder until a fortissimo climax is reached. The themes are further developed or compressed, with a cadenza
In music, a cadenza (from it, cadenza, link=no , meaning cadence; plural, ''cadenze'' ) is, generically, an improvised or written-out ornamental passage played or sung by a soloist or soloists, usually in a "free" rhythmic style, and ofte ...
for the harp, which precedes the recapitulation.[
The harp returns to the first theme of the allegro section, with the accompaniment of trills by strings and woodwinds. The melody passes from instrument to instrument, the music becoming louder and softer again, with short interludes for the harp solo. The principal melody is given in variation form in the harp, accompanied by pizzicato strings, leading to an animated and fortissimo conclusion.][
]
Arrangements
During Ravel's lifetime, his publisher, Durand et cie, issued, in addition to the original score, arrangements of the Introduction and Allegro for solo piano (by J. Charlot), piano four hands (by L. Roques), two pianos (by the composer), and harp and piano (by the composer). Ravel was not averse to having the piece played by larger ensembles than a septet. in a letter to Désiré-Émile Inghelbrecht in February 1911 he wrote:
Several recordings of the work have the string parts expanded from quartet to full string orchestra.[
]
Critical reception
Comparing Debussy's 1904 ''Danses sacrée et profane'' with Ravel's piece commissioned in response, the critic Mark de Voto comments that the former are "restrained and even austere, but no less sensuous in their subtlety, without so much as a hint of the harp’s most characteristic gesture, the glissando", whereas Ravel's is "a brilliant virtuoso piece" with "a lushness of colour" and "a remarkably full instrumental sound".
In a 2011 study Roger Nichols comments that although Ravel had described the piece as finished "for better or for worse", the musical public "has long decided that it was 'for better'". In Nichols's view the work, from an aesthetic point of view, is a minor one but inhabits an "original and beautiful sound-world" and technically represents an advance on the String Quartet
The term string quartet can refer to either a type of musical composition or a group of four people who play them. Many composers from the mid-18th century onwards wrote string quartets. The associated musical ensemble consists of two violinist ...
premiered the year before the composition of the Introduction and Allegro.
In his 2012 ''Ravel the Decadent'', Michael Puri interprets the Introduction and Allegro as "a scene of reanimation" – in the words of another analyst, Jessie Fillerup, "a dawn that heralds renewal while pointing toward the inevitable dusk". Puri considers the music to be the closest relation in Ravel's works to the ballet '' Daphnis et Chloé'', commissioned in 1909.
Recordings
The composer directed an early recording of the work in London in 1923, with an ensemble comprising Gwendolen Mason, harp; Robert Murchie, flute; Haydn Draper, clarinet; and a string quartet led by George Woodhouse.[Orenstein (2014), p. 256] The commentator Robert Philip comments that the recording lasts nine and a half minutes, substantially less than most later recordings, and "the Allegro sounds very fast to modern listeners (by comparison, a 1938 recording by Lily Laskine and the Calvet Quartet, for example, lasts just under eleven minutes)".
Among the many subsequent recordings are:
Ravel's arrangement of the piece for two pianos has been recorded (1990) by Louis Lortie
Louis Lortie, OC, CQ (born 27 April 1959) is a Canadian ( Québécois) pianist.
Education
Born in Montreal, Lortie made his debut with the Montreal Symphony Orchestra at the age of thirteen and the Toronto Symphony Orchestra three years l ...
and Hélène Mercier, and (2009) Tiziana Moneta and Gabriele Rota.[ La Bottega Discantica CD 8015203102019]
Notes, references and sources
Notes
References
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External links
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{{Authority control
1905 compositions
Chamber music by Maurice Ravel
Compositions for septet
Compositions for harp
Compositions for flute
Compositions for clarinet
Compositions for string quartet
Compositions in G-flat major
Music with dedications