Maurice Ravel
Maurice Ravel was among the most significant and influential composers of the early 20th century. Although he is frequently linked with Claude Debussy as an exemplar of musical impressionism, and some of their works have a surface resemblance, Ravel possessed an independent voice that grew out of his love of a broad variety of styles, including the French Baroque, Bach, Mozart, Chopin, Spanish folk traditions, and American jazz and blues. His elegant and lyrically generous body of work was not large in comparison with that of some of his contemporaries, but his compositions are notable for being meticulously and exquisitely crafted. He was especially gifted as an orchestrator, an area in which he remains unsurpassed.
Ravel's mother was of Basque heritage, a fact that accounted for his lifelong fascination with Spanish music, and his father was a Swiss inventor and engineer, most likely the source of his commitment to precision and craftsmanship. At the age of 14, he entered the Paris Conservatory, where he was a student from 1889 to 1895 and from 1897 to 1903. His primary composition teacher was Gabriel Fauré. A major disappointment of his life was his failure to win the Prix de Rome in spite of numerous attempts. The difficulty was transparently the conflict between the conservative administration of the Conservatory and Ravel's independent thinking, meaning his association with the French avant-garde (Debussy), and his interest in non-French traditions (Wagner, the Russian nationalists, Balinese gamelan). He had already established himself as a composer of prominence with works such as his String Quartet, and the piano pieces Pavane pour une infante défunte, Jeux d'eau, and the Sonatine, and his loss of the Prix de Rome in 1905 was considered such a scandal that the director of the Conservatory was forced to resign.
Ravel continued to express admiration for Debussy's music throughout his life, but as his own reputation grew stronger during the first decade of the century, a mutual professional jealousy cooled their personal relationship. Around the same time, he developed a friendship with Igor Stravinsky. The two became familiar with each other's work during Stravinsky's time in Paris and worked collaboratively on arrangements for Sergey Diaghilev.
Between 1909 and 1912, Ravel composed Daphnis et Chloé for Diaghilev and Les Ballets Russes. It was the composer's largest and most ambitious work and is widely considered his masterpiece. He wrote a second ballet for Diaghilev, La Valse, which the impresario rejected, but which went on to become one of his most popular orchestral works. Following his service in the First World War as an ambulance driver and the death of his mother in 1917, his output was temporarily diminished. In 1925, the Monte Carlo Opera presented the premiere of another large work, the "lyric fantasy" L'enfant et les sortilèges, a collaboration with writer Colette.
American jazz and blues became increasingly intriguing to the composer. In 1928 he made a hugely successful tour of North America, where he met George Gershwin and had the opportunity to broaden his exposure to jazz. Several of his most important late works, such as the Sonata for Violin and Piano No. 2 and the Piano Concerto in G show the influence of that interest.
Ironically, Ravel, who in his youth was rejected by some elements of the French musical establishment for being a modernist, in his later years was scorned by Satie and the members of Les Six as being old-fashioned, a symbol of the establishment. In 1932, an injury he sustained in an automobile accident started a physical decline that resulted in memory loss and an inability to communicate. He died in 1937, following brain surgery.
In spite of leaving one of the richest and most important bodies of work of any early 20th century composer, one that included virtually every genre except for symphony and liturgical music, Ravel is most often remembered for an arrangement of another composer's work, and for a piece he considered among his least significant. His orchestral arrangement of Mussorgsky's piano suite Pictures at an Exhibition has been wildly popular with concertgoers (and the royalties from it made Ravel a rich man). Boléro, a 15-minute Spanish dance in which a single theme is repeated in a variety of instrumental guises, has been ridiculed for its insistent repetitiveness, but it is also a popular favorite and one of the most familiar and frequently performed orchestral works of the 20th century.
© Stephen Eddins /TiVo
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Ravel - Haydn - Bloch
Chamber Music - Released by VDE-GALLO on 13 Jan 2013
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Ravel: The Boléro and Other Great Works
Ballets - Released by Promo Sound Ltd on 11 Jun 2012
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Maurice Ravel: In Chamber Orchestra
Chamber Music - Released by Plaza Mayor Company, Ltd. on 23 Apr 2012
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Maurice Ravel: In Piano Music
Chamber Music - Released by Plaza Mayor Company, Ltd. on 23 Apr 2012
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Maurice Ravel: In Melody Music
Classical - Released by Plaza Mayor Company, Ltd. on 23 Apr 2012
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Works For Piano And Violin And Piano
Classical - Released by Saphir Productions on 1 Feb 2009
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Mussorgsky, M.: Pictures at an Exhibition (Orch. Ravel) / Stravinsky, I.: Firebird Suite (Ormandy) (1953)
Maurice Ravel, Philadelphia Orchestra, Eugene Ormandy
Classical - Released by Naxos Classical Archives on 1 Jan 2000
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Ravel: Bolero - La Valse - Pavane pour une infante défunte - Daphnis et Chloe
Sofia Symphony Orchestra, Slovenian Symphony Orchestra, Ivan Marinov
Classical - Released by Int - Bertus on 30 Sep 2016
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Ravel: Mirrors, M.43: No.2 Birds of Sadness (2024 Remaster)
Classical - Released by Pastel Records Canada on 10 May 2024
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Ravel: Tzigane, Rhapsody for Violin and Piano in D Major (Digitally Remastered)
Moscow Philharmonic Orchestra, Vassilly Sinaisky, Julia Krasko
Classical - Released by EMG Classical on 9 Dec 2014
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Ravel: Tzigane, Rhapsody for Violin and Piano in D Major (Digitally Remastered)
Juri Petrov, Jane Christee Gehringer
Classical - Released by EMG Classical on 9 Dec 2014
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Bolero (Electronic Version)
Electronic - Released by Digi Records on 28 Feb 2021
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Electronic Ravel: Le Tombeau de Couperin
Alternative & Indie - Released by Al Goranski on 2 Nov 2022
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Electronic Matters (Electronic Version)
Electronic - Released by Digi Records on 20 Feb 2021
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Wilhelm Furtwängler
Classical - Released by Piros - Artyvoz on 1 Jun 2015
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World Classics: Magic
Classical - Released by Piros Comercial Digital on 27 Nov 2013
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Zen Classical: Tchaikovsky, Ravel, Rachmaninoff
Pyotr Illitch Tchaïkovski, Maurice Ravel, Serge Rachmaninoff
Classical - Released by UME - Global Clearing House on 13 May 2024
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The Best of Ravel (Remastered)
Miscellaneous - Released by Classic Records Ltd. on 27 Apr 2018
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Synth addiction (Electronic Version)
Electronic - Released by Electro Roma on 15 Jun 2022
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Ravel - La Valse
Orchestre de la Société des Concerts Symphonique de Paris, René Leibowitz
Classical - Released by Violet Hill Records on 13 Jun 2012
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Ravel: Boléro
London Philharmonic Orchestra, Hugo Rignold
Classical - Released by Sunday Club Records on 24 Oct 2014
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