middle-aged man with full head of white hair and large white moustache
Fauré in 1896

Sicilienne, Op. 78, is a short work by Gabriel Fauré, composed in 1893. It was originally an orchestral piece, written for a theatrical production that was abandoned. In 1898 Fauré arranged the unperformed music as a work for cello and piano, and in the same year incorporated it into his incidental music for Maurice Maeterlinck's play, Pelléas et Mélisande, in an orchestration for theatre orchestra. It took its final form as part of a suite arranged for full orchestra by Fauré, published in 1909.

History and versions

In 1892 the manager of the Grand Théâtre, Paris, asked the composer Camille Saint-Saëns to write incidental music for a production of Molière's Le Bourgeois gentilhomme.[1] Saint-Saëns was too busy to accept the commission, and successfully recommended his friend and former pupil Fauré. The music, which included the first version of the Sicilienne, was nearly complete when the theatre went bankrupt in 1893. The production was abandoned and the music remained unperformed.[1]

1898 arrangement for cello & piano

Five years later, Fauré arranged the work for cello and piano. The Fauré scholar Jean-Michel Nectoux writes that the transcription was made for the Dutch cellist Joseph Hollman.[2] It was published in London and Paris in April 1898, with a dedication to the English cellist W. H. Squire.[3]

At the same time, Fauré was working on incidental music for the first English production of Maurice Maeterlinck's play, Pelléas et Mélisande, which opened in June 1898.[4] Needing a lighthearted piece for one of the few playful scenes in the drama, he included the Sicilienne along with the new music he wrote for the production.[5] His former pupil Charles Koechlin orchestrated the score for the theatre orchestra of 16 players.[6][7]

The final form of the Sicilienne is in the four-movement Pelléas et Mélisande suite for full orchestra, arranged by Fauré and published in 1909.[4] Nectoux notes that the final orchestration differs from Fauré's original 1893 version, written for chamber-sized theatre orchestra: in particular, the main theme is given to the oboe in the original score and to the flute in the final version in the suite.[1]

The cello and piano version is in G minor in 6
8
time
, typical of the sicilienne genre. The score is marked andantino with a metronome indication of dotted crotchet = 50. The full orchestral version, also G minor, is marked allegretto molto moderato. The playing time of the piece is typically between three-and-a-half and four minutes.[8]

The cello and piano and full orchestral versions of the Sicilienne have been recorded many times. There are also recordings of arrangements, not by Fauré, for bassoon and piano;[9] cello and guitar;[10] cello and harp;[11] flute and guitar;[12] flute and harp;[13] flute and piano;[14] guitar and orchestra;[15] solo guitar;[16] solo harp;[17] oboe and piano;[18] panpipes and piano;[19] saxophone and orchestra;[20] saxophone quartet;[21] tuba and piano;[22] viola and piano;[23] vocal ensemble;[24] and voice and harp.[25]

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 Nectoux, p. 147
  2. Nectoux, p. 276
  3. Nectoux, p. 548
  4. 1 2 Duchen, p. 217
  5. Nectoux, pp. 155–156
  6. Duchen, pp. 132 and 217; and Jones, p. 90
  7. Nectoux, Jean-Michel. Notes to EMI CD Fauré: L'oeuvre d'orchestre, 2C167-73071/3, 1981.
  8. Notes to Chandos CD CHAN8952, 1991; Naxos CD 8.570545, 2010; and Decca CD 00028941055224, 2007
  9. Meister Music CD MM3087, 2016
  10. Deutsche Grammophon CD 00028947764014, 2007
  11. Marquis Classics CD MAR-373, 2007
  12. Antes Edition CD BM31.9135, 1999
  13. Capriccio CD C10765, 1996
  14. Skarbo CD DSK4074, 2007
  15. Naxos CD 8.550480, 1992
  16. Universal Classics CD 00028947284727, 2003
  17. Meister Music CD MM2046, 2009
  18. Tudor CD TUDOR7067, 2009
  19. Thorofon CD CTH2142, 1992
  20. Sony Classical CD 886443378964, 1986
  21. Concert Artists Guild CD CAG102, 2008
  22. Mark Records CD 3748-MCD, 2001
  23. Profil CD PH14012, 2014
  24. Meister Music CD MM1172, 2004
  25. Centaur CD CRC2508, 2001.

Sources

  • Duchen, Jessica (2000). Gabriel Fauré. London: Phaidon. ISBN 978-0-7148-3932-5.
  • Jones, J. Barrie (1989). Gabriel Fauré – A Life in Letters. London: B T Batsford. ISBN 978-0-7134-5468-0.
  • Nectoux, Jean-Michel (1991). Gabriel Fauré – A Musical Life. Roger Nichols (trans). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-23524-2.
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