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Étienne Méhul - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Étienne Méhul

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Étienne Méhul, by H.E. von Winter
Étienne Méhul, by H.E. von Winter

Etienne Henri (or Nicolas) Méhul (June 22, 1763 - October 18, 1817) was a French composer, "the most important opera composer in France during the Revolution."[1] He was also the first composer to be called a "Romantic".[2]

Contents

[edit] Life

He was born at Givet in Ardennes. His father being too poor to give him a regular musical education, his first lessons came from a poor blind organist of Givet; yet such was his aptitude that, when ten years old, he was appointed organist of the convent of the Récollets. In 1775 a German musician and organist, Wilhelm Hauser, was engaged for the monastery of Lavaldieu, a few miles from Givet, and Méhul became his occasional pupil.

In 1778 or 1779 he went to Paris and placed himself under Jean-Frédéric Edelmann, a harpsichord player and friend of Méhul's idol Christoph Willibald von Gluck. Méhul's first published composition was a book of pieces for the harpsichord in 1783. He also arranged airs from popular operas and by the late 1780s he had begun to think about an operatic career for himself. In 1787, a certain writer, Valadier, offered Méhul one of his libretti, Cora, which had been rejected by Gluck in 1785.[3] The opera took four years to reach the stage. In the mean time, Méhul had found an ideal collaborator in the shape of the librettist François-Benoît Hoffman, who provided the words to the first of Méhul's operas to be performed, Euphrosine. Its premiere in 1790 was an immense success and marked the composer out as a new talent to be reckoned with. It was also the start of his long relationship with the Comédie Italienne theatre (soon to be renamed the Opéra-Comique). In spite of the failure of Cora which finally appeared the following year and the banning of Adrien for political reasons the year after that, Méhul consolidated his reputation with works such as Stratonice and Mélidore et Phrosine. During the Revolutionary period in France, Méhul composed many patriotic songs and propaganda pieces, the most famous of which is the Chant du départ. Méhul was rewarded by becoming the first composer named as member of the newly founded Institut de France in 1795. He also held a post as one of the five inspectors of the Conservatoire de Paris. Mehul was on friendly terms with Napoleon and became one of the first Frenchmen to receive the Légion d'honneur. Méhul's operatic success was not as great in the first decade of the nineteenth century as it had been in the 1790s, although works such as Joseph (1807) became famous abroad, particularly in Germany. The failure of his opera Les Amazones in 1811 was a severe blow and virtually ended his career as a composer for the theatre. In spite of his friendship with Napoleon, Méhul's public standing survived the transition to the Bourbon Restoration intact. However, the composer was now seriously ill with tuberculosis and he died on October 18, 1817.[4]His grave is at the cemetery of Père Lachaise, near the grave of another French composer, his contemporary François-Joseph Gossec.

[edit] Works

[edit] Operas

Méhul's most important contribution to music was his operas. He led the generation of composers who emerged in France in the 1790s, which included his friend and rival Luigi Cherubini and his outright enemy Jean-François Lesueur. Méhul followed the example of the operas which Gluck had written for Paris in the 1770s and applied Gluck's "reforms" to opéra comique (a genre which mixed music with spoken dialogue and was not necessarily at all "comic" in mood). But he pushed music in a more Romantic direction, showing an increased use of dissonance and an interest in psychological extremes such as anger and jealousy, thus foreshadowing later Romantic composers such as Weber and Berlioz. Indeed, Méhul was the very first composer to be styled a Romantic; the Marquis de Condorcet used the term when reviewing Méhul's Le jeune sage et le vieux fou in La chronique de Paris on April 1, 1793.[5] His main musical concern was that everything should serve to increase the dramatic impact. As his admirer Berlioz wrote:

[Méhul] was fully convinced that in truly dramatic music, when the importance of the situation deserves the sacrifice, the composer should not hesitate as between a pretty musical effect that is foreign to the scenic or dramatic character, and a series of accents that are true but do not yield any surface pleasure. He was convinced that musical expressiveness is a lovely flower, delicate and rare, of exquisite fragrance, which does not bloom without culture, and which a breath can wither; that it does not dwell in melody alone, but that everything concurs either to create or destroy it - melody, harmony, modulation, rhythm, instrumentation, the choice of deep or high registers for the voices or instruments, a quick or slow tempo, and the several degrees of volume in the sound emitted.[6]

One way in which Méhul increased dramatic expressivity was to experiment with orchestration. For example, in Uthal, an opera set in the Highlands of Scotland, he eliminated violins from the orchestra, replacing them with the darker sounds of violas in order to add local colour.[7] Méhul's La chasse du jeune Henri provides a more humorous example, with its expanded horn section portraying yelping hounds as well as giving out the hunting calls. Sir Thomas Beecham frequently programmed this piece to showcase the Philharmonia horn section, led by Dennis Brain. The contemporary listener is still impressed by the pictorial and dramatic effects of Méhul's composition through Sir Thomas's languid rendering of the camp awakening for a day of hunting, followed by a chase that is ratcheted up through an astonishing series of accelerations to final horn calls that are madness.
Méhul's key works of the 1790s were Euphrosine, Stratonice, Mélidore et Phrosine and Ariodant.[8] Ariodant, though a failure at its premiere in 1799, has come in for particular praise from critics. Elizabeth Bartlet calls it "Mehul's best work of the decade and a highpoint of Revolutionary opera".[9] It deals with the same tale of passion and jealousy as Handel's 1735 opera Ariodante. As in many of his other operas, Mehul makes use of a structural device called the "reminiscence motif", a musical theme associated with a particular character or idea in the opera. This device looks forward to the leitmotifs in Richard Wagner's music dramas. In Ariodant, the reminiscence motif is the cri de fureur ("cry of fury"), expressing the emotion of jealousy.[10]

Around 1800, the popularity of such stormy dramas began to wane, replaced by a fashion for the lighter opéra comiques of composers such as Boieldieu. In addition, Mehul's friend Napoleon told him he preferred a more comic, less serious style of opera. As a Corsican, Napoleon's cultural background was Italian, and he loved the opera buffa of composers like Paisiello and Cimarosa. Méhul responded with L'Irato ("The Angry Man"), a one-act comedy premiered as the work of the Italian composer "Fiorelli" in 1801. When it became an immediate success, Méhul revealed the hoax he had played.[11] Méhul also continued to compose works in a more serious vein. Joseph, based on the Biblical story of Joseph and his brothers, is the most famous of these later operas, but its success in France was short-lived. In Germany, however, it won many admirers throughout the nineteenth century, including Wagner.[12]

[edit] Symphonies

Besides operas, Méhul composed a number of songs for the festivals of the republic (often commissioned by the emperor Napoleon), cantatas, and five symphonies in the years 1797 and 1808 to 1810.The First Symphony was revived in one of Felix Mendelssohn's concerts with the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra in 1838 and 1846 to an audience including Robert Schumann, who was impressed by the piece. In all four movements there are some stylistic similarities with Beethoven's Symphony No.5 (including the dissonant, furious mood of the first movement and the string pizzicatos in the third), which were also noted by Schumann. Actually at this date only Beethoven's Symphonies No.1 and 2 (1799/1800 and 1802) had been performed in France and both Beethoven's Fifth and Mehul's First were composed in the same year, 1808, were published in the following, 1809. In his mature symphonies, Mehul continued the path Haydn (the Paris Symphonies, 1785-86, for example), Mozart (Symphony No. 40, K.550, 1788) had taken, two composers who enjoyed great popularity in France in the early 19th century. A fifth symphony was never completed - "as disillusionment and tuberculosis took their toll", as David Charlton pointed out. The Symphony No.3 and 4 was only rediscovered by Charlton in 1979.

[edit] Works

  • For Piano
    • 3 Sonates for Piano, op. 1 (1783)
    • 3 Sonates for Piano, op. 2 (1788)
  • Orchestral Music
    • Ouverture burlesque (1794)
    • Ouverture pour instruments à vent (1794)
    • Symphony in C (1797, only parts are surviving)
    • Symphony No.1 in G minor (1808/09)
    • Symphony No.2 in D major (1808/09)
    • Symphony No.3 in C major (1809)
    • Symphony No.4 in E major (1810)
    • Symphony No.5 (1810, only a first movement survives)
  • Vocal Music
    • Chant du départ (1794)
    • Chant des Victoires (1794)
    • Messe Solennelle pour soli, chœurs et orgue (1804)
    • Chant du retour pour la Grande Armée (1808)
    • Chant lyrique pour l'inauguration de la statue de Napoléon (1811)
  • Ballets
    • Le Jugement de Pâris (1793)
    • La Dansomanie (1800)
  • Operas
    • Euphrosine (1790)
    • Cora (1791)
    • Stratonice (1792)
    • Le jeune sage et le vieux fou (1793)
    • Horatius Cocles (1794)
    • Mélidore et Phrosine (1794)
    • Doria ou La Tyrannie détruite (1795)
    • La Caverne (1795)
    • Le jeune Henri(1797)
    • Le pont de Lody (1797)
    • Ariodant (1799)
    • Adrien, empereur de Rome(1799)
    • Épicure (1800, with Luigi Cherubini)
    • Bion (1800)
    • L'Irato ou L'Emporté(1801)
    • Une Folie (1802)
    • Le trésor supposé ou Le danger d'écouter aux portes (1802)
    • Joanna (1802)
    • Héléna (1803)
    • Le baiser et la quittance (1803, with Boieldieu, R. Kreutzer and Isouard)
    • Les deux Aveugles de Tolède (1806)
    • Uthal (1806)
    • Gabrielle d'Estrées ou Les Amours d'Henri IV(1806)
    • Joseph (1807)
    • Les Amazones ou la Fondation de Thèbes (1811)
    • Le Prince troubadour ou Le grand trompeur des dames (1813)
    • L'Oriflamme (1814, with Berton and R.Kreutzer)
    • La Journée aux aventures(1816)
    • Valentine de Milan (1822)

[edit] Discography

  • The Complete Symphonies (Symphonies No.1-No.4). Lisbon Gulbenkian Foundation Orchestra, Michel Swierczewski (including the Ouvertures La Chasse du jeune Henri and Le Trésor supposé), Nimbus Records, 1992
  • Symphonies Nos 1 and 2. Les Musiciens du Louvre, Marc Minkowski, Erato/Apex, 2003
  • Overtures. Orchestre de Bretagne/ Stefan Sanderling, ASV, 2003
  • Stratonice. Petibon/Beuron/Lescoart/Daymond, Corona Coloniensis, Cappella Coloniensis, William Christie, Erato 1996
  • Joseph (as Joseph in Aegypten), two versions of the work in German both recorded in 1955: (a) Alexander Welitsch/Libero di Luca/ Horst Guenter/Ursula Zollenkopf, Symphony Orchestra and Choir of NWDR, Wilhelm Schuechter; (b) Alexander Welitsch/Josef Traxel/Bernhard Michaelis/Friederike Sailer, Stuttgart Radio Symphony Orchestra, Suedfunk Chor, Alfons Rischner. Gala, 2004.
  • La Chasse du jeune Henri, Le Trésor supposé and Timoléon Royal Philharmonic Orchestra/Sir Thomas Beecham, Sony, 2002.
  • L'Irato Turk/Auvity/Courtin/Buet/Chamber Choir Bonn, L'arte del mondo, Walter Ehrhardt, Capriccio, 2006.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Bartlet p.vii
  2. ^ Cairns p.220; Orga (2002).
  3. ^ Arthur Searle, "Manuscripts and printed music", Early Music 19.2 (1991:269-274).
  4. ^ General biography from Bartlet (1997) pp.vii-ix
  5. ^ Orga (2002)
  6. ^ Berlioz p.354
  7. ^ Charlton (1993) p.644
  8. ^ Charlton (1994) p.127
  9. ^ Bartlet p.x
  10. ^ Bartlet p.x
  11. ^ Berlioz p.352
  12. ^ Charlton (1993)

[edit] References

  • Introduction to the edition of Méhul's opera Stratonice by M.Elizabeth C. Bartlet (Pendragon Press, 1997)
  • David Charlton, section on Méhul in The Viking Opera Guide ed.Holden (1993)
  • David Charlton, chapter on "French Opera 1800-1850" in The Oxford Illustrated History of Opera ed. Roger Parker (OUP, 1994)
  • Berlioz Evenings with the Orchestra, translated by Jacques Barzun (University of Chicago Press, 1953)
  • Booklet notes by David Charlton to the recording "The Complete Symphonies" (Nimbus, 1989)
  • Booklet notes by Ates Orga to the recording of Méhul's "Overtures" (ASV, 2002).
  • David Cairns Berlioz: the Making of an Artist (André Deutsch, 1989).

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