Overture Magazine - 2014-2015 May-June 2015 | Page 23

also an expression of a turbulent period in the composer’s life. When the work was premiered in Paris on October 15, 1905, many of the critics and even Debussy’s friends did not like it. After the delicate colors and veiled emotions of his recent opera Pélléas et Mélisande, they found La mer’s intense drama and loud, blazing climaxes unworthy of the composer. But Debussy had aimed for something new in this work. If he had already shown the sea as gentle and mysterious in Sirènes, the last movement of his Nocturnes, now he was going to describe its raw elemental power, corresponding to the deepest turmoil in the human soul. Neither symphony nor tone poem (Debussy hated Richard Strauss’ graphic musical descriptions), La mer was subtitled “Three Symphonic Sketches.” The first, “From Dawn to Noon on the Sea,” begins with a slow, misty introduction out of which important motives rise as the day breaks. Gradually, the roll of the sea emerges: a fair-weather sea of sparkling waves and steady breezes. A brass chorale appears at the end, portraying the midday sun blazing overhead. “Play of the Waves” is lighter in mood and orchestration. In the work’s scherzo section the waves frolic “in a capricious sport of wind and spray.” (Oscar Thompson). The finale, “Dialogue of the Wind and the Sea,” begins ominously with the rumble of timpani and gong and a stormy cello/bass motive. A passionate melody, introduced by woodwinds and eventually treated in grand Romantic fashion by the strings, seems as much inspired by Debussy’s tumultuous love affair as by the storm-tossed waters. Motives from the first movement as well as the brass chorale return for a frenzied conclusion: Debussy finally tearing away his habitual self-protective veil. Get results from award-winning design and print services that are within your area code and within your budget. For over two decades, we’ve served local businesses and nonprofits, producing everything from ads, annual reports and brochures, to web sites and logos. (We even designed and printed the magazine you’re holding right now.) To see samples of our work or to discuss your next project, call us at 443-873-3916. Proud supporter of the BSO Instrumentation: Two flutes, piccolo, two oboes, English horn, two clarinets, three bassoons, contrabassoon, four horns, three trumpets, two cornets, three trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion, two harps and strings. Notes by Janet E. Bedell, Copyright ©2015 www.baltimoremagazine.net/dpd May– June 2015 | O v ertur e 21