Erik Satie (1866 -1925)
Piano Works (Selection)
The French composer Erik Satie earned himself a contemporary reputation
as an eccentric. Stravinsky later described him as the oddest person he had
ever known and at the same time the most rare and consistently witty. His
musical innovations proved immensely influential on his nearer contemporaries
Debussy and Ravel and on a younger generation of composers and artists in the
years after the war of 1914.
Satie was born in 1866 at Honfleur, on the coast of Normandy. His
father was, at the time, a ship's broker, while his mother was of Scottish
origin. Something of later eccentricity seems to have been acquired from his
paternal uncle, Adrien Satie, known in Honfleur as a character. The family
moved to Paris, but on the death of Satie's mother in 1872 he was sent back to
Honfleur to the house of his grandparents. Six years later he returned to
Paris, where, in 1879 he entered the Paris Conservatoire. There he was to prove
an undistinguished and unsatisfactory pupil, lingering on, according to one
friend, in order to avoid the obligatory five years of military service. His
status as a student allowed him a period of one year in the 33rd Infantry, cut
short by a severe attack of bronchitis that he had deliberately courted.
Satie's few months of soldiering were followed by the first
publications of his music, two piano pieces, and then a set of five songs,
settings of poems by his friend Contamine de Latour, published by his father,
who now had a stationer's shop and small publishing business. Inspired by his
reading, in the early 1890s Satie came for a time under the influence of the
extraordinary Joséphin Péladan, self-styled Sâr Merodack of the Rose + Croix,
an eccentric exponent of Rosicrucianism, with whom he had broken by 1892.
Eclectic medieval preoccupations led him to establish his own mock religion,
the Metropolitan Church of the Art of Jesus the Conductor. Of this he described
himself fancifully as Parcier et Maître de Chapelle, the first title sheer invention,
issuing his publication, Le cartulaire,
in which critical enemies were attacked in appropriate style. At the same time,
paradoxically, he was involved with Rudolf Salis and his bohemian cabaret, the
Chat noir. The same years brought contact with Debussy, with whom he remained
on good terms in the years that followed, in spite of the latter's tendency to
patronise him.
In 1905, after a period in which he had been compelled to earn his
living as a café pianist and a composer of appropriate music Satie enrolled as
a student at the Schola cantorum, where his teachers included Vincent d'lndy
and Roussel. Here he attempted to make up for technical deficiencies in his
techniques as a composer by a concentration on traditional counterpoint. He
completed his studies in 1908, but only began to win some success through the
agency of Ravel, who in 1911 performed the three Sarabandes that Satie had written in 1887, establishing the
innovative originality of Satie's early work. The following years brought his
compositions before a wider public, but it was through the advocacy of Jean
Cocteau that Satie's fame was more firmly established, particularly with
collaboration in the Dyagilev ballet Parade, with choreography by Massin and
décor by Picasso. The scandal of the first performance in May 1917 made Satie a
hero to a younger group of composers, to be known as Les Six. In 1923, under
the inspiration of Darius Milhaud, his collaborator in musique d'ameublement,
furniture music that was not supposed to be listened to, he became the centre
of another group of younger composers, the Ecole d' Arceuil, its name derived
from the poor and relatively remote district of Paris where Satie had lived a
life of the utmost simplicity, his room furnished with a chair, a table and a
hammock, the last heated in winter by bottles filled with hot water placed
below and looking, Stravinsky tells us, like some strange kind of marimba. He
died on 1st July, 1925, after an illness of some six months.
Satie wrote for the theatre, and particularly for dancers. His
compositions include songs, chamber music and, above all, piano pieces of
surprising simplicity, apparent ingenuousness, and harmonic originality, often
embellished with titles or instructions that defy idiomatic translation. The three
Véritables préludes flasques,
three really flabby preludes, were written in 1912, for a dog, and are far from
flabby. The first, Sévère réprimande,
is severely contrapuntal, the second, Seul à
la maison, Alone in the house, delicately so, and the third, On joue, play-time, more energetic.
Preposterous directions in the score are given in dog-Latin.
The first three Gnossiennes
were written in 1890, the fourth in 1891, the fifth in 1889 and the sixth in
1897. The title, a mysterious one, suggests the world of Minoan Cnossos and the
labyrinth, while the score, written without bar-lines, includes bizarre
instructions to the player - du bout de la pensée, from the tip of the thought,
sur la langue, on the tip of the tongue, sans orgueil, without pride, and dans
une saine superiorité, with healthy superiority. Eccentric witticisms of this
kind are visible only to the performer.
The Menus propos enfantins
of 1913 and the Enfantillages pittoresques
of the same year are real children's pieces. The first starts with the war-song
of the king of the beans, proceeding to the words of the princess of the tulips
and the waltz of the chocolate almonds. The second group, more conventional in
titles, starts with a little prelude to the day, followed by a cradle-song and
the march of the grand staircase, so grand that no-one dared to use it and the
king used to jump out of the window instead. Croquis
et agaceries d'un gros bonhomme en bois, sketches and provocations
of a portly wooden man, contains three parodies, the first a Turkish Tyrolean
dance, the second a thin dance, in the manner of these gentlemen, and the third
making fun of Chabrier and Debussy in Spanish vein, including remarks on the
score - Puerta Maillot, Plaza Clichy
and
A la disposicion de Usted.
Chapitres tournés en tous sens,
chapters turned in all directions, opens with a woman who talks too much,
demanding a hat in massive mahogany, and prattling on until her husband dies of
exhaustion. The man carrying great stones amazes by his strength (he is only
carrying a pumice stone) and includes the quotation from a popular operetta
"C'est un rien, un souffle." In the regrets of those shut in,
dedicated to Debussy's second wife, the popular song “Nous n'irons plus au
bois”, quoted by Debussy in Jardins sous la
pluie, is used ironically.
The three Desciptions automatiques
are equally characteristic in their allusive parody. The first, Sur un vaisseau, on a ship, quotes the
song “Maman, les petits bateaux”, and Sur la
lanterne, a current music-hall song, while the third, Sur un casque, on a helmet, completes the
typical trilogy. Embryons desséchés,
desiccated embryos, of the same year, 1913, indulges in remoter fantasy, with
imaginary descriptions of three marine creatures. Holothurie, the sea-cucumber,
is said to climb about on stones and rocks and to purr like a cat. Satie claims
to have observed one at St. Malo, and opens the piece with a version of the
song “Mon rocher de St. Malo”. Edriophthalma are described as crustaceans with
sessile eyes and by nature of a sad disposition, dignified here by quotation of
Chopin's Funeral March, identified ironically in the score as a Schubert
Mazurka. Podophthalma, skilful and indefatigable hunters, are restrained by an
injunction in the score, Ah! Ne courez pas
commme ça, and end in an obligatory and emphatic cadence - cadence
obligée - de lauteur.
The three Gymnopédies,
their title derived from the festival dance of naked boys in ancient Sparta,
were written in 1888. The first and third of the group were later orchestrated
by Debussy. In their solemn simplicity they prefigure remarkably one path that
French music was to take. The Passacaille,
a product of Satie's years of study at the Schola cantorum, was published
posthumously, a record of his contrapuntal achievement, and the final six
pieces, the titles of which are apparently not the composer's, came from the
period of his life before his emergence in 1913 in the role of all-licensed
fool, his witty clowning in part a defence in the company of his well
established contemporaries Debussy, and, in these years, Ravel.
Klára Körmendi
The Hungarian pianist Klára Körmendi was born in Budapest and studied
under Kornél Zempléni at the Bartók Conservatory, later becoming a student of
Péter Solymos at the Liszt Academy, where she received her diploma with
distinction in 1967. She enjoyed early success in a number of international
competitions, before embarking on a career that has taken her to the major
musical centres of Europe, with broadcasts in Vienna, Paris and London, as well
as Basle, Cologne, Lausanne and Ljubljana. Klára Körmendi has a wide
repertoire, and has always shown particular interest in contemporary
repertoire, both Hungarian and foreign. Her recordings for Hungaroton include
music by Pierre Boulez, Olivier Messiaen, Luciano Berio and Heinz Holliger.