Clair de lune (Fauré)
"Clair de lune", ("Moonlight") Op. 46 No 2, is a song by Gabriel Fauré, composed in 1887 to words by Paul Verlaine.
History
Fauré's 1887 setting of the poem was for voice and piano; but in 1888, at the instigation of the Princesse de Polignac, he made a version for voice and orchestra, first performed at the Société Nationale de Musique in April of that year, with the tenor Maurice Bàges as soloist.[1][2] In its orchestral form the song was included in Fauré's incidental music Masques et bergamasques in 1919.[1] The original published version (Hamelle, Paris, 1888) is in B-flat minor. The song is dedicated to Fauré's friend the painter Emmanuel Jadin, who was a talented amateur pianist.[3]
The pianist Graham Johnson notes that it closes Fauré's second period and opens the doors into his third. Johnson notes that it is "for many people the quintessential French mélodie".[4]
Lyrics by Verlaine
The lyric is from Paul Verlaine's early collection Fêtes galantes (1869). It inspired not only Fauré but Claude Debussy, who set it in 1881 and wrote a well known piano piece inspired by it in 1891.[4]
Lyrics
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Notes references and sources
Notes
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An anonymous rhyming English version reads:
- Your soul is as a moonlit landscape fair,
- Peopled with maskers delicate and dim,
- That play on lutes and dance and have an air
- Of being sad in their fantastic trim.
- The while they celebrate in minor strain
- Triumphant love, effective enterprise,
- They have an air of knowing all is vain,—
- And through the quiet moonlight their songs rise,
- The melancholy moonlight, sweet and lone,
- That makes to dream the birds upon the tree,
- And in their polished basins of white stone
- The fountains tall to sob with ecstasy
References
- Nectoux, p. 338
- Nectoux, p. 540
- Nectoux, pp. 67 and 540
- Johnson, Graham (2005). Liner notes to Hyperion CD CDA 67334
- French text, public domain; English translation checked against translations at The Reader Organisation Archived 2010-12-30 at the Wayback Machine, accessed 29 January 2011, and Johnson, Graham (2005), Liner notes to Hyperion CD CDA 67334.
Sources
- Nectoux, Jean-Michel (1991). Gabriel Fauré – A Musical Life. Roger Nichols (trans.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-23524-2.
External links
- 2 Songs, Op.46: Scores at the International Music Score Library Project