L'Arlésienne (Bizet)

Georges Bizet composed L'Arlésienne as incidental music to Alphonse Daudet's play of the same name, usually translated as The Girl from Arles. It was first performed on 1 October 1872 at the Théâtre du Vaudeville in Paris.[1] [n 1] Bizet's music consists of 27 numbers (some only a few bars) for voice, chorus, and small orchestra, ranging from short solos to longer entr'actes. Bizet himself played the harmonium backstage at the premiere performance.[1]

L'Arlésienne
Incidental music by Georges Bizet
The composer
KeyB major then changes to D major
Based onL'Arlésienne
by Alphonse Daudet
Performed1 October 1872 (1872-10-01): Paris
Movements4
Scoring
  • voice
  • chorus
  • small orchestra
L'Arlésienne
Suite No. 1
by George Bizet
Performed10 November 1872 (1872-11-10): Paris
Movementsfour
Scoringorchestra
L'Arlésienne
Suite No. 2
by George Bizet
Published1879 (1879)
Movementsfour
Scoringorchestra

Bizet's music contains several folk-like themes for the music but also incorporated three existing tunes from a folk-music collection published by Vidal of Aix in 1864: La Marcho di Rei (The March of the Kings), the Danse dei Chivau-Frus, and Er dou Guet. The score achieves powerful dramatic ends with the most economic of means.[2] Still, it received poor reviews in the wake of the premiere and is not much performed nowadays in its original form. The play itself was not successful, closing after only 21 performances. It had been staged as a last-minute replacement for another play, which had been banned by the censors, and the audience was less than favourably disposed to the new play.[1]

The incidental music has survived and flourished, however. It is most often heard in the form of two suites for orchestra, but has also been recorded complete.

Musical numbers

(1) Overture – the March of the Kings; L’Innocent’s theme; Frédéri’s theme.

Act 1

Tableau 1: The farm at Le Castelet In the first mélodrame (No 2) Francet Mamaï, Frédéri’s grandfather, tells the shepherd Balthazar and Frédéri’s young brother (called ‘l’Innocent’) of Fredéri’s passion for a girl from Arles, while l’Innocent, whose theme dominates this and the next two numbers, tries to talk to the shepherd about a fable about a wolf attacking a goat.

The next mélodrame (3) links the first and second scenes of the play, as the old shepherd, Balthazar, continues telling the wolf story to l’Innocent. The third mélodrame (4) accompanies an exchange between Vivette, Rose Mamaï’s god-daughter, and Balthazar, where the shepherd says he thinks something is stirring in l’Innocent’s mind.

In scene VIII, after a gay offstage chorus, a mélodrame (5), introduces the theme of Mitifio, a cow-herd; he has come to reveal that the Arlésienne has been another’s mistress for two years. In the mélodrame and final chorus (6), Frédéri is about to go off to Arles, but Francet tells him what Mitifio said. The chorus bursts in with a reprise of (5) as Frédéri’s theme accompanies his collapse by the well.

Act 2

Tableau 2: Alongside the pond of Vaccarès in the Camargue (7) sets the scene, a Pastorale (the Pastorale in the second suite) with offstage chorus and accompaniment. In Mélodrame (8) Balthazar and l’Innocent enter in Scene III (using the latter’s theme), and (9) marks the exit of Rose. The next mélodrame (10) accompanies the discovery of Fréderi in the shepherd’s hut, angry because everyone is spying on him. As wordless offstage chorus sing, Balthazar leaves, having failed to make Frédéri destroy the letters from the Arlésienne which he reads night and day. Mélodrame (12) is only six bars; l’Innocent cannot recall the story he wants to tell his brother. In the next mélodrame (13), (Er dou guet) described as a ‘berceuse’, l’Innocent falls asleep while telling his story. A nine-bar mélodrame (14) evokes Rose’s desperation at Fréderi’s frame of mind.

Tableau 3: The kitchen at Castelet

The next music (the Intermezzo used in the second suite) depicts Vivette, the local girl who wants to marry Frédéri, preparing her parcels to take on the Rhone ferry (15). After men prepare to go out shooting game Rose and the others fear that Frédéri might kill himself. At the end of the act (16) when Frédéri decides that Vivette can help him forget his obsession, Balthazar and Rose express their relief.

This is followed by the Minuet (17) and the Carillon (18), both used in the first suite.

Act 3

Tableau 4: The Castelet farm courtyard

A 6/8 Andantino Mélodrame (19) marks the entrance of Mère Renaud in Scene III, and in the following Adagio (the Adagietto in the first Suite) Balthazar and Renaud reminisce about old times. As all move off to eat, there is a reprise of the Andantino. Another Andantino follows the exit of Frédéri and Vivette as they declare their love (20). The farandole (21) (Danse dei Chivau-Frus) which begins quietly and builds to a climax sees Frédéri respond with fury to Mitifio who has come to tell Balthazar that he will run off with

the girl from Arles (22).

Tableau 5: The Cocoonery

The farandole is heard then the March of the Kings is sung by the chorus, after which the two are combined (23); there is reprise for chorus of the March of the Kings (24). In (25) l’Innocent ‘awakens’ showing he understands his brother’s problem. In mélodrame (26) Rose is momentarily reassured as the clock strikes three, while the Final is a powerful tutti version of Frédéri’s theme (27) which brings down the curtain.

Orchestration

Two flutes (second doubling piccolo), oboe (also cor anglais), clarinet, two bassoons, alto saxophone, two French horns, timpani, tambourin (tambourin provençal not tambourine), seven violins, one viola, five cellos, two double basses, piano, and an offstage harmonium to accompany the choruses.

Suite No. 1

Background

Despite the poor reviews of the incidental music, Bizet arranged his work into a suite of four movements. Now known as L'Arlésienne Suite No. 1, the suite used a full symphony orchestra but without the chorus. The first performance was at a Pasdeloup concert on 10 November 1872.

Movements

  • II. Minuet, Allegro giocoso (The ending of this movement is slightly expanded from the version in the incidental music.)
Musical scores are temporarily disabled.
  • III. Adagietto (In the incidental music, this number is preceded and followed by a melodrama that, in the suite, forms the central section of the concluding Carillon. For this purpose it is transposed up a semitone.)
Musical scores are temporarily disabled.
Musical scores are temporarily disabled.

Comments

The suite opens with a strong, energetic theme, which is based on the Epiphany carol "March of the Kings", played by the violins. (This tune had also been used two centuries earlier in Jean-Baptiste Lully's Marche de Turenne.) Afterwards, the theme is repeated by various sections. After reaching a climax, the theme fades away. It is followed by the theme associated with L'Innocent (the brother of Frédéri, the hero). The Prélude concludes with the theme associated with Frédéri himself. The second movement, resembles a minuet, while the third is more emotional and muted. The last movement, Carillon, features a repeating bell-tone pattern on the horns, mimicking a peal of church bells.

Suite No. 2

Background

L'Arlésienne Suite No. 2, also written for full orchestra, was arranged and published in 1879, four years after Bizet's death, by Ernest Guiraud, using Bizet's original themes (although not all

of them were from the L'Arlésienne incidental music). The second suite is generally credited to Bizet since he wrote the themes and the basic orchestration.

Movements

Musical scores are temporarily disabled.
Musical scores are temporarily disabled.

Comments

The second suite begins with an introduction by the wind section, followed by the melody in the strings. The melodies are repeated by various sections throughout the first movement. In the suite, the opening section returns and concludes the piece. In the original version, the "central" section, which was a wordless chorus sung by women, ends the piece. The second movement intermezzo features utilization of low tones and begins with the wind section. Guiraud adds twelve additional bars to the concluding section. Sometime after this second suite was prepared from the L'Arlesienne music, Guiraud extracted the Intermezzo movement, added the Latin sacred text of the Agnus Dei to it, and published it as yet another "new" work of Bizet. The menuet, which is not from L'Arlésienne, but from Bizet's 1866 opera The Fair Maid of Perth, features solos by harp, flute, and, later, saxophone (this replacing the vocal parts of the original); it is the most subdued and emotional movement. The finale, the farandole, incorporates the theme of the March of the Kings once again. This is an expanded combination of numbers 21 and 23-24 of the original incidental music, in which the farandole appears first on its own. It is afterwards briefly combined with the march.

Recordings

The suites have been recorded many times. There are at least two recordings of the complete incidental music for the play, one conducted by Albert Wolff[3] and another by Michel Plasson (who has also recorded both suites). Marc Minkowski has made a more recent nearly-complete recording on the Naive label.

1922, film directed by André Antoine with Jean Jacquinet as Marc, Maguy Deliac as Vivette, Gabriel de Gravone as Frédéric, Charles de Rochefort as Mitifio.

1930, film directed by Jacques de Baroncelli with Jim Gérald as Marc, Germaine Dermoz as Rose Mamaï, Blance Montel as Vivette, José Noguero as Frédéric, Charles Vanel, as Mitifio.

1942, film directed by Marc Allégret with Raimu as Marc, Gaby Morlay as Rose Mamaï, Giselle Pascal as Vivette and Louis Jourdan as Frédéri; Paul Paray conducted Bizet’s score.[4]

Nathanaël Gouin, piano, Menuet (Sergei Rachmaninov's single piano transcript 1900 &1922). CD Mirare 2020

Notable uses

Music from the L'Arlésienne suites was played extensively in "Hammer Into Anvil", an episode of The Prisoner.

The Carillon and Farandole were used on two episodes of Playhouse Disney's Little Einsteins.

The Carillon was used in a very successful media campaign in Puerto Rico, launched in the late 1980s by the local importers of Finlandia Vodka. It featured French-born photographer Guy Paizy playing the role of a sophisticated, womanizing classical orchestra conductor. The campaign is still remembered in the island nation, almost two decades after its inception.

Albanian dictator Enver Hoxha adopted the First Suite's Prelude as a military march during his reign.

The Japanese group Mihimaru GT uses the theme of the Farandole for their song "Theme of mihimaLIVE 2".

An American songwriter, composer, and arranger Ben Homer created a jazz arrangement "Bizet Has His Day" (from Georges Bizet's "Farandole" from L’Arlésienne-Suite), (1945).

Jazz musician Bob James arranged and recorded a jazz version of Farandole on his album Two (1975).

French choreographer Roland Petit created a ballet L'Arlésienne in 1974 which has been performed throughout the world, based on Daudet's short story and set against a Van Gogh landscape.[5]

A rock version of Farandole appears in the Catherine (video game) by Atlus.

The song tune is also used in a character song called England's Evil Summoning Song from an anime called Hetalia: Axis Powers and was performed by Noriaki Sugiyama, who provided vocals for Arthur Kirkland/England. According to an interview with Noriaki in Hetalia Character CD Perfect Guide, the lyrics were entirely made up by the performer as the performance went on.

Notes

  1. The Vaudeville Theatre was knocked down and replaced in 1927 by a cinema known as the Gaumont Opéra.

References

  1. musikmph Archived 2012-06-07 at the Wayback Machine
  2. Dean W. Bizet. London, J M Dent & Sons, 1978.
  3. On Decca LXT5229-30, with actors Mary Marquet, Berthe Bovy, Maurice Chambreuil, Pierre Larquey, Hubert Noel and Fernand Sardou. Reissued on Accord and Naxos.
  4. DVD toile page about L'Arlésienne.
  5. List of choreographic work by Roland Petit. Official site of Roland Petit, accessed 7 October 2014.

Bibliography

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