Fragmentation and eros in Debussy's Chanson de Bilitis and Six Épigraphes antiques

Debussy based one of his last piano works, the Six Epigraphes antiques of 1914, on some unpublished incidental music he had composed in 1901 for Pierre Louys's Chansons de Bilitis. The original Bilitis music has typically been disparaged as a rough draft, left in fragments because Debussy di...

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Main Author: Iwaasa, Rachel
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2011
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/30894
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-308942018-01-05T17:45:45Z Fragmentation and eros in Debussy's Chanson de Bilitis and Six Épigraphes antiques Iwaasa, Rachel Debussy based one of his last piano works, the Six Epigraphes antiques of 1914, on some unpublished incidental music he had composed in 1901 for Pierre Louys's Chansons de Bilitis. The original Bilitis music has typically been disparaged as a rough draft, left in fragments because Debussy didn't have enough time to finish it. The longer, more unified piano pieces are conventionally regarded as the polished, completed form of the earlier material. This dissertation argues that fragmentation is a central symbol in Louys's Chansons de Bilitis, and that rough edges, broken forms and extreme brevity of Debussy's musique de scene constitute a sensitive response to the poetic text. The two works are related to historical fragmentary procedures in both literature and music. The loss of the celesta part for the incidental music is proposed as an aesthetically significant, and perhaps intentional, reflection of the poetry's themes of historical loss and decay. It is suggested that the work should therefore be performed without reconstructing the missing celesta part, and to this end, a new transcription of the work for flute and piano is included as an appendix, compiled from the surviving manuscript sources. In this light, the treatment of musical themes and poetic references in the Six Epigraphes antiques is analyzed as a later repudiation of Louys's aesthetic and moral philosophies. The friendship between these two artists and their rupture in 1904 are examined, with particular emphasis on their other attempts at collaboration. Arts, Faculty of Music, School of Graduate 2011-01-27T18:54:28Z 2011-01-27T18:54:28Z 2006 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/30894 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. University of British Columbia
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language English
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description Debussy based one of his last piano works, the Six Epigraphes antiques of 1914, on some unpublished incidental music he had composed in 1901 for Pierre Louys's Chansons de Bilitis. The original Bilitis music has typically been disparaged as a rough draft, left in fragments because Debussy didn't have enough time to finish it. The longer, more unified piano pieces are conventionally regarded as the polished, completed form of the earlier material. This dissertation argues that fragmentation is a central symbol in Louys's Chansons de Bilitis, and that rough edges, broken forms and extreme brevity of Debussy's musique de scene constitute a sensitive response to the poetic text. The two works are related to historical fragmentary procedures in both literature and music. The loss of the celesta part for the incidental music is proposed as an aesthetically significant, and perhaps intentional, reflection of the poetry's themes of historical loss and decay. It is suggested that the work should therefore be performed without reconstructing the missing celesta part, and to this end, a new transcription of the work for flute and piano is included as an appendix, compiled from the surviving manuscript sources. In this light, the treatment of musical themes and poetic references in the Six Epigraphes antiques is analyzed as a later repudiation of Louys's aesthetic and moral philosophies. The friendship between these two artists and their rupture in 1904 are examined, with particular emphasis on their other attempts at collaboration. === Arts, Faculty of === Music, School of === Graduate
author Iwaasa, Rachel
spellingShingle Iwaasa, Rachel
Fragmentation and eros in Debussy's Chanson de Bilitis and Six Épigraphes antiques
author_facet Iwaasa, Rachel
author_sort Iwaasa, Rachel
title Fragmentation and eros in Debussy's Chanson de Bilitis and Six Épigraphes antiques
title_short Fragmentation and eros in Debussy's Chanson de Bilitis and Six Épigraphes antiques
title_full Fragmentation and eros in Debussy's Chanson de Bilitis and Six Épigraphes antiques
title_fullStr Fragmentation and eros in Debussy's Chanson de Bilitis and Six Épigraphes antiques
title_full_unstemmed Fragmentation and eros in Debussy's Chanson de Bilitis and Six Épigraphes antiques
title_sort fragmentation and eros in debussy's chanson de bilitis and six épigraphes antiques
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/30894
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