"Pelleas et Melisande" Track Listing01 - Ein wenig bewegter - zoegernd.flac 02 - Heftig - sehr warm in breiter Bewegung.flac 03 - Lebhaft - etwas zuruckhaltend - Wieder lebhaft.flac 04 - Ein wenig bewegter - Sehr rasch.flac 05 - Langsam - Heftig.flac 06 - Sehr langsam.flac 07 - Sehr langsam gedehnt.flac 08 - Ein wenig bewegt.flac 09 - Langsam.flac 10 - Ein wenig bewegter.flac 11 - Viel rascher beschleunigend.flac 12 - Wieder wie vorher.flac 13 - Nach und nach etwas bewegter.flac 14 - Etwas bewegt - heftig.flac 15 - In gehender Bewegung.flac 16 - Breit.flac 17 - Nach und nach wieder ins Tempo.flac 18 - Prelude.flac 19 - Fileuse.flac 20 - Sicilienne.flac 21 - La Mort de Melisande.flac The title "Pelleas et Melisande" awakens associations with the play by Maurice Maeterlinck, with the opera of Claude Debussy as well as with orchestral works of composers such as Gabriel Faure, Arnold Schonberg and Jean Sibelius. This symbolist drama about forbidden love is renowned for its complexity, deep thoughts and little action, which is not meant pejoratively, but highlights that the work is not easily accessible. Arnold Schonberg composed a vast and demanding symphonic poem, and even the pieces of incidental music need an explanation when detached from the stage. Maurice Maeterlinck and Symbolism The lyricist and dramatist Maurice Maeterlinck (1862-1949) belongs, besides Paul Verlaine (1844-1896), Arthur Rimbaud (1854-1891) and Stephane Mallarme (1842-1898), to the most important representatives of symbolist literature. Symbolism consciously turns away from positivism and naturalism and underlines the mysterious in the world and in the soul. The authors refer to the unreal and aim to create a floating atmosphere. In their ambiguity the writings are directed less towards an understanding than towards the production of suggestive moods. In 1890 Maurice Maeterlinck first drew attention to himself with the drama "La princesse Maleine", although he achieved his most enduring success with the drama "Pelleas et Melisande" written in 1892. This five act play was first performed on May 16, 1893 in the Theatre de Bouffes-Parisiens in Paris and was, in contrast to the works by the other symbolists, soon to be experienced in numerous other theatres and was not restricted merely to French speaking countries. The drama "Pelleas et Melisande" With the subject matter of "exceeding normal love", the drama "Pelleas et Melisande" becomes a counterpart to Richard Wagner's music drama "Tristan and Isolde". Maurice Maeterlinck found the material in different dramas, stories and fairy tales. Tragic threesome relationships are not only to be found in Wagner's music drama, but also in Dantes "Divine Comedy". in the episode about Francesca da Rimini, and in Ludwig Tieck's drama "The Life and Death of the Holy Genevieve". The poet found further motives in William Shakespeare's "Othello" (jealousy!) as well as in fairy tales of the Brothers Grimm. Relevant are also the Well Scene in the "Frog Prince" and the Hair Scene in "Rapunzel". In accordance with its lyric nature the scenario of the drama dispenses with coarse effects and thereby gains a rather subliminal expressiveness: The widowed Golaud, grandson of King Arkel of Allemonde, finds the weeping Melisande in the forest by a spring. At his castle he marries the unknown lady. He asks his brother Pelleas to intercede with his grandfather Arkel on his behalf, since for political reasons his marriage to a different woman had already been arranged. Melisande remains in an oppressed state, and her only rays of hope are her encounters with Golaud's brother Pelleas. A strangely unconscious love relationship develops, which is accompanied by mysterious incidents: As Melisande's ring falls by mistake into the well, Golaud falls at the same moment from his horse. His wife claims to have lost her ring in the grotto. Accompanied by Pelleas, she is horrified to encounter there three old men exhausted by hunger. The scene in which Pelleas wraps himself into Melisande's long hair is especially poetic. However, Golaud becomes distrustful and has Pelleas and Melisande observed by Yniold, his son from his first marriage. Golaud's jealousy increases, and when Pelleas is about to depart on a lengthy journey and says goodbye to Melisande, he is killed by his brother. Although Melisande could flee, her death is now inevitable. As she is dying, Golaud asks for her forgiveness, and asks for the truth about her relationship to his brother. Her thoughts however are only concerned with her daughter, just born, who must now live alone in a gloomy world. Up until the end, everything remains unclear. The Sound of Late-Romanticism: Arnold Schonberg's Symphonic Poem It was Richard Strauss (1864-1949) who drew the attention of Arnold Schonberg, ten years his junior, to Maurice Maeterlinck's drama "Pelleas et Melisande". Strauss, whose great operatic successes were still ahead of him, nevertheless recommended this material as a basis for an opera. Without knowing about Debussy's project, Arnold Schonberg did not write an opera, but a symphonic poem. By this he stepped into closer competition with Richard Strauss rather than with Claude Debussy. "Pelleas und Melisande" is Arnold Schonberg's first large orchestral work. At that time the composer had moved his centre of activity from Vienna to Berlin. During the years 1901 to 1903 he was the conductor at Ernst von Wolzogen's cabaret "Uberbrettl", and later also accepted a teaching position at the Sternschen Conservatoire. The symphonic poem "Pelleas und Melisande" was completed on the 28th February 1903, but the first performance did not take place until the 25th January 1905 in Vienna. It was Arnold Schonberg's aim with "Pelleas und Melisande" to write a consciously modern composition. With this in mind, he attempted to follow on from Richard Wagner's and Richard Strauss's established musical language, even to extend it. On the other hand, he was keen to grasp as many details of the drama as possible in his orchestral work. Many years later Schonberg regretted not having realised the original opera plan, particularly as his work would clearly have differed from Claude Debussy's composition. But the orchestral work is nevertheless a significant composition, about which Schonberg said: "On the other hand, the Symphonic Poem was an advancement for me, because it taught me to express moods and characters in precisely formed musical units, a procedure which an opera may not have served so well." He further explained about his Symphonic Poem: "It is completely inspired by Maurice Maeterlinck's wonderful drama. Apart from only few omissions and slight changes in the order of the scenes, I tried to reflect every detail. Maybe, as often happens in music, more space is dedicated to the love scenes." This he achieved, summoning up all his forces in a 45 minute composition with an enormous instrumentation and an emphatically advanced harmony. At its premiere the work aroused opposition because its dimensions appeared too enormous, and for the audience there was too little melodiousness. Although in the first performances one believed to hear only an aimless rambling, the Schonberg pupil Alban Berg proved in 1920 for the first time the strict architecture: the single movement Symphonic Poem subliminally presents the four movements of a symphony. Accordingly, the first section, which relates firstly to Golaud and Melisande and then to Pelleas and Melisande, is founded on the model of a classical sonata form. The second section has the structure of a Scherzo and treats the scene at the fountain, shows Pelleas kissing his beloved's hair and continues up to the scene in the cavern under the castle. The third section deals with love and parting, and Golaud's fratricide, in the form of a slow symphonic movement. The finale, a reprise of the first section, is a reflection on Melisande's death. Arnold Schonberg characterises the three central figures with extensive leitmotives. Harmoniously Schonberg begins to go new ways, using chords of fourths for the first time. Chromaticism also plays an important role in the composition. In this manner, a work of spectacular expressiveness was created, in addition however, not freely wandering, but following a strict plan. Performances of Arnold Schonberg's remarkable symphonic poem are seldom to be experienced since the composer did not continue in the late-romantic style - even more excessive is the choice of forces in "Gurre-Lieder" - but turned towards new objectives. The Neo-Classical Atmospheric Pictures of Gabriel Faure's Incidental Music Gabriel Faure's success with his incidental music "Pelleas et Melisande" seems in relation to his biography at first unpredictable, since for nearly forty years he worked as a church musician. In addition he wrote, above all, songs and chamber music, and with his only opera "Penelope" he later had a substantial success. Indeed, orchestral music hardly concerned him, and it is significant that his best known orchestral pieces were originally stage compositions. Namely, the suite "Pelleas et Melisande" and the divertissement "Masques et Bergamasques". Gabriel Faure wrote his incidental music "Pelleas et Melisande" for the English-language premiere of Maeterlinck's play on the 21st June 1898 at the Prince of Wales Theatre in London. The original incidental music consists of a total of nineteen musical numbers, for which the composer repeatedly reused existing material. Then in 1900 Faure arranged three of the longer orchestral pieces into a Suite, extended the orchestral forces, and added a Sicilienne. Still in its three-movement version the Suite op. 80 was first heard on the 3rd February 1901 in Paris. Thus Faure's music had arrived both in the theatre and in the concert hall. The orchestral suite "Pelleas et Melisande" consists, in its final version, of four movements, which captivate the listener with wonderfully sensitive neo-classical atmospheric pictures. It goes without saying that leitmotives hardly play a role here. Of more importance is the particular atmosphere of individual scenes of the play. The "Prelude" stresses the prevailing fairy-tale mood of the drama and offers room for the presentation of nostalgic feeling. At the same time, the magic forest is also presented, because it is there that Golaud - in the incidental music a bugle call is repeatedly assigned to him - meets the mysteriously tender Melisande. The second movement, "La Fileuse" ("the spinner girl"), remembers the music of Faure's teacher Camille Saint-Saens and his symphonic poem "The Spinning-Wheel of the Omphale": Above the softly circling movement of the spinning-wheel, the woodwinds firstly present a melancholic melody, joined later by the strings. Thematic imitations point to an aesthetic workmanship. With the gentle "Sicilienne" (No. 3) the spectrum of expressions is considerably extended. This movement relates back to one of Faure's earlier compositions. Flute and harp lend the "Sicilienne" a brightness which cannot however be found in the play. "La mort de Melisande" (No. 4), a movement of restrained melancholy and exquisite beauty, concludes both the Incidental Music and the Orchestral Suite. Michael Tegethoff