Debussy Prelude A L'apres Midi D'une Faune Flashcards
1
Q
What style is Debussy’s Prelude A L’apres Midi D’une Faune?
A
Impressionist
2
Q
Context
A
- The poem describes a faun, alone in a forest, playing on his pan-pipes. Passing nymphs (personification of nature in Greek mythology) arouse him and he pursues them. He is unsuccessful in his pursuit, falls asleep and has vivid dreams.
- Premiered in Paris in 1894.
3
Q
Orchestration
A
- Solo flute representing Faun’s pipe, 4 horns and 2 harps.
- Unusual - Antique cymbals; tuned percussion instruments - appear near the end playing a perfect fifth (E to B).
- Harp glissandi create shimmering effect
- Pizzicato and Arco techniques used, sometimes in rapid succession (eg. Bars 25-26)
- Tremolo is used in strings. (e.g Bar 95: both strings and clarinets use tremolo)
- Harmonics used on harp (eg. Bars 108-109).
- Woodwind often given solo lines that focus on their individual timbres (flute, oboe and clarinet are often isolated in this way).
-Full complement of strings with 10 woodwind
4
Q
Structure
A
Ternary form with coda
1-54 A
55-78 B
79-93 A
94-110 Coda
OR
1-30 A (flute theme)
31-36 Transition based on flute theme
37-54 A1 (oboe theme)
5
Q
Tonality
A
- Keys are present but are not established or defined traditionally
- Chromatic melody at start (tritone), no established key - tonal ambiguity
- Bar 21 - when the melodic C#s fit with E major chord (with added 6th both in the melody and the harmony)
- Bar 55 - Db major V-I in bass
- Perfect cadence in E major (Bars 105-106) V-I in bass
- Begins and ends in E major -> giving structure a sense of completion
6
Q
Harmony
A
- Non-functional harmony
- Much use of 7th chords
- Use of chord extensions; 9th, 11th and 13th notes
- Non-resolving Dominant 7th chords (eg. Bar 5)
- Pedals (eg. Bars 94-99)
- Chromatic harmony
- Half-diminished chords, eg. Bar 4.
7
Q
Melody
A
- Opening two bars - chromatic combination of tones and semitones. Radically, they cover the range of a tritone.
- Bar 3 - melody covers range of an octave and it could be viewed as either diatonic or as a minor pentatonic on C#.
- Whole tone scale b32 clarinet
- Bar 21 is a varied and rhythmically diminished version of Bar 3
8
Q
Rhythm and metre
A
-Compound triple - opening metre
- Metre frequently changes
- B section stays in simple triple metre throughout
- Bar 1 - semiquaver triplets
- Bar 21 - quintuplets in harp, bar 106 - quadruplets
- Bar 67 - cross rhythms
- Bar 55 - syncopation in accompanying strings