
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Maurice Ravel’s orchestral suite Le Tombeau de Couperin was premiered in Paris on this day in 1920. It had started out as a suite of solo piano pieces, intended as a tribute to great French Baroque composer François Couperin — or, as Ravel wrote, “not so much to Couperin himself, as to 18th-century French music in general.”
Although the French word “tombeau” translates literally as “tomb,” it also signifies a musical piece paying tribute to a past master, in the English sense of “in memoriam.” In that spirit, Ravel dedicated each movement of his suite to friends of his killed during World War I.
Although the “tombeau” as a musical form has been associated almost exclusively with French composers, one contemporary American composer has used the form as well, albeit with more wickedly satirical intent. Michael Daugherty’s Tombeau de Liberace jokingly references the pianist and showman, a kitschy icon of 20th century American pop culture.
Michael Daugherty said, “Starting from the vernacular idiom, I have composed Le Tombeau de Liberace as a meditation on the American sublime: a lexicon of forbidden music. It is a piano concertino in four movements, each creating a distinct Liberace atmosphere.”
Maurice Ravel (1875-1937): Le Tombeau de Couperin; St. Paul Chamber Orchestra; Hugh Wolff, conductor; Teldec 74006
4.7
168168 ratings
Maurice Ravel’s orchestral suite Le Tombeau de Couperin was premiered in Paris on this day in 1920. It had started out as a suite of solo piano pieces, intended as a tribute to great French Baroque composer François Couperin — or, as Ravel wrote, “not so much to Couperin himself, as to 18th-century French music in general.”
Although the French word “tombeau” translates literally as “tomb,” it also signifies a musical piece paying tribute to a past master, in the English sense of “in memoriam.” In that spirit, Ravel dedicated each movement of his suite to friends of his killed during World War I.
Although the “tombeau” as a musical form has been associated almost exclusively with French composers, one contemporary American composer has used the form as well, albeit with more wickedly satirical intent. Michael Daugherty’s Tombeau de Liberace jokingly references the pianist and showman, a kitschy icon of 20th century American pop culture.
Michael Daugherty said, “Starting from the vernacular idiom, I have composed Le Tombeau de Liberace as a meditation on the American sublime: a lexicon of forbidden music. It is a piano concertino in four movements, each creating a distinct Liberace atmosphere.”
Maurice Ravel (1875-1937): Le Tombeau de Couperin; St. Paul Chamber Orchestra; Hugh Wolff, conductor; Teldec 74006
6,069 Listeners
9,127 Listeners
1,187 Listeners
3,109 Listeners
3,008 Listeners
501 Listeners
38,664 Listeners
883 Listeners
8,636 Listeners
38,139 Listeners
1,354 Listeners
13,261 Listeners
3,598 Listeners
235 Listeners
6,683 Listeners
27,490 Listeners
5,496 Listeners
2,086 Listeners
13,484 Listeners
1,124 Listeners
5,869 Listeners
15,937 Listeners
3,600 Listeners
199 Listeners
1,075 Listeners