Ravel's Harmony
Ravel's Harmony
Ravel's Harmony
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branch of art is degraded in this way. We do notthan never. The Dame thinks it is time her
find Sybil Thorndike announced as 'Britain's audiences were weaned from 'Good-bye' and the
Queen of Tragedy,' or Seymour Hicks as 'Jewel Song'; and her farewell tour will give her
' England's Comedy King.' They would gain a chance of starting the process at once. Will she
having set a bad example by adopting the title Not much, it seems, for at her concert at Glasgow
'Britain's Queen of Song,' she should now set a few days ago Tosti's 'Good-bye' was forth-
RAVEL'S HARMONY
Concert'). Therein she says that she 'loves anupon music as purely devoid of tone, as young painters
English audience as much as it loves her. To nowadays regard the defunct 'cubism.'
appeals for their favourite songs she is never deaf.'Nevertheless, while the good sense of the Latin
race has preserved certain schools from the harmonic
What were the 'favourite' songs she gave them so
excesses of Vienna (which, indeed, were necessary
readily ? I have not the complete programme, but
and salutary in view of the final clarification), it
from a newspaper report I find that at the 'Au
must yet be admitted that no European musician,
Revoir Concert' at the Albert Hall she sang the
during the period extending from 188o to I920, has
'Jewel Song' from 'Faust,' Tosti's 'Good-bye,' succeeded in escaping from the great 'harmonic
and 'By the Waters of Minnetonka,' the last- nightmare,' and that a feverish embellishment of
named being a song which, judging from the harmony has been the main technical preoccupation
sample of text and music quoted in the Musical of these musicians.
Times of June, I92I, is surely one of the world's Consequently, Ravel could not evade the law of
very worst. As these songs were deemed good his time. Indeed, we note that his music is
enough for London in I92I, we may be characterised by harmonic refinement of extreme
sure they were not too bad for the provinces atpreciosity and of absolute perfection.
We have now to consider what are the more or
that time. In the face of these facts, the Dame'sless immediate origins of this harmony, and after
lament over public taste is the sheerest humbug.wards of what it consists essentially.
If thirty years ago she had realised the responsi- When the amazing personality of Maurice Ravel
bilities of her position as one of the most giftedbegan to express itself, many critics thought it righ
to dispute the existence in him of any originality
and popular of singers, she could have done a great
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truth. And in the Debussy-Ravel affair we can eleventh harmonic the first traces of which
now readily discern that while the personalities of
both musicians are fundamentally divergent, and
quite as impossible to confuse as those of Schumann are actually to be seen in Mozart.
and Mendelssohn, it is nevertheless evident that
Truth to tell, we find in Debussy frequent
both had identical predilections as regards the allusions to this harmonic. Nevertheless, Debussy
past. And the essential. trait that unites the two still remains the exponent of the major ninth. And
creators is that they altogether repudiated the tireit is only in Ravel that the new chord is finally used
some and ridiculous burden of a philosophico-in a constant, conscious, and spontaneous mannerfor while his early works still contain such rare
musical Wagnerism, and, instead, returned to a more
Latin conception ofmusic. Both revered Mozart examples of the major ninth as:
and Chopin ; they were ardent admirers of the
Ex..'.
AliY
their clarity.
(-7ex
d'ea
from
the
period
(1902-03)
we
mee
makes of the eleventh harmonic:
personalities. Whereas the indolent and voluptuous
muse of Massenet manifestly entrances Debussy in
his youth (see 'L'Enfant Prodigue,' ' Printemps,' &c.),
the neo-classic spirit of Camille Saint-Satns-also
EX..2
Ti
o 4 Fl-R
consider.
concepts.
Jean Marnold once said that the only musical Apropos of Ravel, much has been said of unre-
difference between romanticism and the 18th centurysolved affoggiature, thus exaggerating the importance
of this artifice in his music. In most cases the
the chord of the major ninth, introduced by most important are which dates back to
Weber, gave a totally different complexion to the
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(Dafihnis et Chloe)
example :
Ex.8
- ; -I F .....UI a U
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as the
the charming d6b^it of the Forlane in the
though amusing enough, considering how slight
'Tombeau de Couperin'). And this tendency
towards simplification is continued in the 'Valse'
Apart from the traditional major and minor scales,
for orchestra, and in the 'Duo' for 'cello and violin.
Ravel fairly often uses the Greek scales-the Dorian,
has been dubbed both scolastique by
the Hypo-dorian, and sometimes also the Phrygian. Ravel
In
youthful compatriots of his, and tarabiscoti
this he approaches Debussy, doubtless because,certain
like
by other fretful minds. There is much truth in both
the author of 'Pell6as,' he had come strongly under
definitions. Still, it is precisely because he succeeded
the Russo-Byzantine influence. His polymodality,
in in
effecting a wonderful equilibrium between sane
however, is essentially different from Debussy's
tradition and an ardent thirst after novelty, that he
that it never employs the hexaphonic scale (in wholehas proved himself the greatest musician in France
tones) ; and it is this that clearly distinguishes Ravel
since the death of Debussy.
not only from Debussy, but also from d'Indy and
At all events, only one thing in art is of
from Dukas, musicians who have made considerable
importance : that the creator attain to that mysterious
use of this scale, which at one time was considered
so opulent and was subsequently found to be so region where spirit and matter are one, where it
becomes impossible to dissociate phantasy from
deficient.
The preceding may suffice to show how profoundlytechnique, because they are so intimately united.
classic is this music which at first appeared And it is henceforth evident that Ravel belongs to
that small band of the elect to whom it has been
to be so revolutionary. The harmony of Ravel
is deeply rooted in tradition. It contains no given to contemplate the serene visage of ultimat
resemblance between the two musicians.
perfection.
striving whatsoever after atonality, nor does it even
attain to polytonality. Its power consists mainly in (Auth/orised translation by Fred Rowell//.)
the fact that, far from being a perilous and empirical
leap into the unknown, it is nothing else than a
splendid embellishment, an amazing ornamental
OPERA RECORDS
'variation' brought to the edifice of high tradition
I.-LONDON, PARIS, AND DRESDEN
by a fascinating craftsman, an artist of genius.
The following bars, which have caused so much
BY WAKELING W. DRY
discussion in the past:
Two interesting centuries of performances were
reached during the last season at Covent Garden
in the case of 'Tristan and Isolda' and 'The
Ex.13.
:q
:q
also first
studies, this musician has been in possession
ofdone
so here during the same Drury Lane
season.
Neither opera seemed to attain much
miraculously perfect a technique that, as
happened
success.
to Bach, Mozart, or Chopin, the perfection
of the
In possithe case of others of the more fam
instrument inevitably assigns limits to the
'Faust' reached its three-hundredth pe
bilities of evolution. All the same, it would be a
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