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The music of Maurice Ravel (1875-1937), beloved by musicians and
audiences since its debut, has been a difficult topic for scholars.
The traditional stylistic categories of impressionism, symbolism,
and neoclassicism, while relevant, have offered too little purchase
on this fascinating but enigmatic work. In Ravel the Decadent,
author Michael Puri provides an innovative and productive solution
by locating the aesthetic origins of this music in the French
Decadence and demonstrating the extension of this influence across
the length of his oeuvre. From an array of Decadent topics Puri
selects three--memory, sublimation, and desire--and uses them to
delineate the content of this music, pinpoint its overlap with
contemporary cultural discourse, and link it to its biographical
context, as well as to create new methods altogether for the
analysis and interpretation of music.
Ravel the Decadent opens by defining the main concepts, giving
particular attention to memory and decadence. It then stakes out
contrasting modes of memory in this music: a nostalgic mode that
views the past as forever lost, and a more optimistic one that
imagines its resurrection and reanimation. Acknowledging Ravel's
lifelong identity as a dandy--a figure that embodies the Decadence
and its aspiration toward the sublime--Puri identifies possible
moments of musical self-portraiture before stepping back to
theorize dandyism in European musical modernism at large. He then
addresses the dialectic between desire and its sublimation in the
pairing of two genres--the bacchanal and the idyl--and leverages
the central trio of concepts to offer provocative readings of
Ravel's two waltz sets, the Valses nobles et sentimentales and La
valse. Puri concludes by invoking the same terms to identify a
topic of "faun music" that promises to create new common ground
between Ravel and Debussy. Rife with close readings that will
satisfy the musicologist, Ravel the Decadent also suits a more
general reader through its broadly humanistic key concepts,
immersion in contemporary art and literature, and clarity of
language.
Collection of critical and analytical scholarly essays on the music
of Ravel by prominent scholars. Unmasking Ravel: New Perspectives
on the Music fills a unique place in Ravel studies by combining
critical interpretation and analytical focus. From the premiere of
his works up to the present, Ravel has been associated with masks
and the related notions of artifice and imposture. This has led
scholars to perceive a lack of depth in his music and,
consequently, to discourage investigation of his musical language.
This volume balances and interweavesthese modes of inquiry. Part 1,
"Orientations and Influences," illuminates the sometimes
contradictory aesthetic, biographical, and literary strands
comprising Ravel's artistry and our understanding of it. Part 2,
"Analytical Case Studies," engages representative works from
Ravel's major genres using a variety of methodologies, focusing on
structural process and his complex relation to stylistic
convention. Part 3, "Interdisciplinary Studies," integratesmusical
analysis and art criticism, semiotics, and psychoanalysis in
creating novel methodologies. Contributors include prominent
scholars of Ravel's and fin-de-siecle music: Elliott Antokoletz,
Gurminder Bhogal, Sigrun B. Heinzelmann, Volker Helbing, Steven
Huebner, Peter Kaminsky, Barbara Kelly, David Korevaar, Daphne
Leong, Michael Puri, and Lauri Suurpaa. Peter Kaminsky is Professor
of Music at the University of Connecticut, Storrs.
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