A ground-breaking study of the musical and literary priorities, professional practices and creative interactions that shaped one of the most adventurous artforms of the Belle Epoque.
French art song, or melodie, was one of the most radical and exploratory artforms of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. It was also among the most intimate, a genre of experimentation, hesitation and unfiltered artistic conversation. In this landmark history, Emily Kilpatrick charts the compositional preoccupations and literary stimuli, the friendships and rivalries, critical narratives and performance practices that shaped French art song between 1870 and the First World War. She traces the expanding horizons of an essentially new musical idiom, moving from the lively debates of the avant-garde to the social and artistic contradictions of the salons, the pedagogy of the Paris Conservatoire, and the eventual accession of song to the concert platform and a central place in the world's musical imagination.
The melodie of the Belle Epoque flourished amidst a culture of creative collaboration, and through the musicianship and advocacy of performers as well as composers. Setting key works by Faure, Duparc, Chausson, Debussy, and Ravel alongside historical curiosities and hidden gems, French Art Song: History of a New Music probes composer-performer relationships and the shaping of performance traditions and addresses the challenges faced by the twenty-first century interpreter. Kilpatrick twines cultural history with musical insight and a wealth of previously unpublished source material in a wide-ranging and richly detailed account of the public and private faces of musical invention.
Industry Reviews
Balances musical analysis with historical narrative and philosophical speculation...[and] deserves the highest praise. Kilpatrick emphasises the hitherto neglected roles of the composer Pierre de Breville and his partner the tenor Maurice Bages, and is at her most entertaining in describing the arrival of Faure as director of the Paris Conservatoire in 1905 and his campaign against the sloppy, narrow-minded voice teaching he found there. A major contribution. * BBC MUSIC MAGAZINE *
This landmark study...explores the musical and literary ethos, professional practices, friendships and rivalries, and creative interactions of composers, poets, singers, and painters. Extensively annotated and illustrated. A valuable resource for performers, teachers, and music lovers. Readers can sit by the piano as they read this book loaded with musical extracts from scores. * AMERICAN RECORD GUIDE *
A rich, multifaceted study of the melodie in its 'golden age'...Combines meticulous philology and archival research, poetic and musical analysis, and approaches from social history, feminist critique, and reception studies. Offers close studies of works not treated elsewhere (like Chausson's early songs or Strohl's Bilitis), models of word-text analysis, and rare insights. * MUSICOLOGY AUSTRALIA *
Consistently probing and thoughtful, anchored by an understanding of the symbiosis between music and poetry... A welcome companion to previous work and an essential resource in its own right. -- Keith E. Clifton * MUSIC LIBRARY ASSOCIATION NOTES *