Arthur Honegger
(1892-1955)
Les Misérables
(Complete Film Score,
1934)
Arthur Honegger, one
of the greatest of twentieth century composers, made an unrivalled contribution
to film music during the course of some thirty years, from his scores for Abel
Gance's La Roue in 1922 and Napoléon in 1926, music that he
regarded as his apprentice work, to his last work of this kind in 1951, a total
production of some forty film scores. Half of these were written and
orchestrated by the composer himself, and the rest in collaboration with Arthur
Hoérée, André Jolivet, Maurice Jaubert, Darius Milhaud, Roland-Manuel and
Maurice Thiriet, this largely through pressure of time. Nevertheless Honegger's
music for films is a considerable achievement for a composer of such importance.
Some of his film scores like Mermoz and Regain were arranged by the composer
for concert use.
Honegger, himself a
film enthusiast often to be seen on the set during shooting, reveals
astonishingly advanced ideas on the function of music in the cinema, his
pre-eminence in the field recognised already in 1936 by Kurt London who
described him as the true leader of modern film music in France. He regarded
the ideal film score as a distinct component in a unified medium, despising
clumsy attempts at cartoon synchronization with movement on the screen and
looking forward to films that might not so much be supplied with music as
inspired by it.
In Honegger's opinion,
cinematic montage differs from musical composition in that, while the latter
depends on continuity and logical development, the film relies on contrasts.
Music and sound must, therefore, adapt themselves to strengthening and
complementing the visual element, while the whole must be an artistic unity, in
which the generally visual imagination of the public may be assisted to a
greater understanding of the musical message.
Before its recent
appearance in the guise of a musical, Victor Hugo's popular novel had been
frequently adapted for the screen. The 1960 version, with Jean Gabin as Jean
Valjean, and a much more recent version with Lino Ventura in the same rôle, are
more memorable for the impressive acting of their stars than for their
cinematic attributes. It is, however, Raymond Bernard's black and white version
of 1934 which, with its greater lyricism, its rendering of the conflicts and
passions and its highly artistic thematic language, creates a more powerful
atmosphere. Besides this, Harry Baur's impersonation of Jean Valjean remains
absolutely unforgettable. These qualities are so heightened by Honegger's score
that we are driven to conclude that this was far more than a mere financial
project on the composer's part: in writing the music for this three-part epic
(about 90 minutes each part), Honegger created a masterwork. Bernard later edited
his film into a one-evening feature, so that some important musical cues
suffered severe cuts, while others disappeared altogether, but fortunately the
complete version has lately been made available again. This major score was
composed in 1934, a fruitful year in Honegger's film music career, which saw
the production of Rapt, L'ldee, Cessez le feu and Crime et châtiment,
and, surprisingly enough, no other works from the "classical" genre.
It was Charles
Koechlin who considered Les Misérables "undoubtedly one of the best film
scores hitherto created", while in Miklós Rózsa's autobiography A
Double Life, we read that Rózsa was so deeply impressed that he urged
Honegger to make a suite out of the music. "It was as good as anything he
had written, and was worthy to stand on its own... It was dramatic and lyrical,
and so much in his individual style that you would have known who the composer
was even without seeing his name in the titles". Eventually, Honegger
followed Rózsa's advice and arranged five movements from Les Misérables
into a suite.
It was while studying
and preparing his first recording of Honegger's film music (containing, among
others, the suite from Les Misérables) that the present writer took up
again the complete manuscript of Les Misérables with which he had been
acquainted since 1983. Although the idea of proposing this work for a complete
recording seemed unrealistic to him, the producer accepted its inclusion in the
projected series of MARCO POLO FILM MUSIC CLASSICS. There is actually no other
complete classic French film score on record yet, apart from an exclusive
Honegger recording of Suites from his film scores and one just wonders why
nobody has bothered to do this before.
Honegger's autograph
is subdivided into 23 cues, and is scored for a symphony orchestra including
saxophone, piano, harp and percussion, and interestingly, omitting double
basses throughout. Considering the length of the original picture,
approximately one hour of incidental music is very little in comparison and especially
in the second part, some extremely long sections could have been enriched by
Honegger's music.
The present performing
version of 17 cues omits three dance pieces (not by Honegger), a short
"source" prelude for organ, a few introductory bars of no real
interest, a theme quotation which has also been crossed out in the manuscript,
and finally Gavroche's short death scene (requiring a singing voice accompanied
by a few instruments). This recording can be considered as complete since it
also restores music which was not used in the film (such as the Cosette et
Marius episode), shortened, or prematurely faded out for editing reasons.
Another aspect of this
version is the linking together of various short pieces in order to create
movements of greater impact or symphonic unity. Fantine, for example, with its
livelier middle section, is a combination of three different short cues from
the same episode. L'assaut and Solitude also required similar editorial work.
Of course, script chronology, thematic or harmonic relation between the edited
sections, or the possibility of creating musical contrasts with respect to the
original intentions were the preconditions. In other cases, some recurrent
repetitions have been ignored, or used in a slightly varied orchestration (as,
for example in the opening section of Mort d'Eponine and Le
Luxembourg). Retouches in the instrumentation were inevitable in the whole
"folk" section of La foire à Montfermeil (actually a
"source" piece heard always in the background), where its piano part
has been arranged for accordion and its rather clumsy percussion section
completely rewritten. In L'assaut, the insertion of an explosion effect
for percussion instruments and an extra part for military drums was found
appropriate, in order to restore the dramatic atmosphere on the screen,
combined with the original "live" sound. Other instrumental retouches
concern the doublings of wind parts, since, following the rather primitive
acoustic possibilities of the equipment of the time, they were used as soli
practically throughout, though still well-balanced against a considerably
smaller string ensemble than the one used in this recording. It was found more
appropriate to adhere to the tempi used by the unforgettable Maurice Jaubert
(the conductor of the original sound track of Les Misérables), rather
than to the often slower metronome indications in the autograph.
The only missing piece
in Honegger's manuscript was a movement, entitled by the present writer Le
convoi nocturne, which had to be actually important and one amongst the very
few cues, where complete orchestral forces are involved, besides the Générique,
Dans les égouts and L'émeute. This had to be reconstructed and
re-orchestrated directly from the sound track. The remaining pieces are
conceived rather on a "chamber" basis and furnish altogether a
perfect example of Honegger's transparent contrapuntal artistry and sense of
orchestration.
Although not a great
lover of leitmotifs, Honegger uses three, unvaried, major themes in his score.
The first is a descending, resigned march motif related to the convicts,
recurring mainly in the Générique and Le convoi nocturne.
Immediately afterwards, in these two movements, there is an ascending motif we
can identify with Jean Valjean's love and generosity. It recurs quite often in
the score and is finally quoted in a transfigured guise in the last scene of
the film (Mort de Jean Valjean). Honegger uses also the
"convict" motif, however, in the revolutionary piece L'émeute,
which makes us understand that, like Victor Hugo in his novel, he felt pity for
all kinds of "miserable" and oppressed people. This exciting
movement, which Honegger included in an arranged form to his suite, was
originally conceived as a main title of the third part of the film. A rather
buoyant "love" motif appears for the first time in Cosette et
Marius the projected main title to the second part, before it was decided
that the Générique should be used in all three parts.
One of the most
powerful movements is without doubt Dans les égouts, where Honegger uses
musical cells and dispenses with a real theme, except in the climax, where Jean
Valjean's "love" motif rises dramatically from the trombones amongst
the orchestral tutti. Honegger also displays a curious experimental aspect in La
foire à Montfermeil, where the reprise of the "source" folk music
piece has superimposed "psychological" glissandi from trombones,
tremoli, glissandi and col legno effects from the strings supported by the
percussion. They illustrate little Cosette's frightful nocturnal experience in
the woods, before meeting Jean Valjean for the first time. Une tempête sous
un crâne is another movement of value and particularly dramatic in its
impact: it emphasizes a longer "conscience struggle" monologue by
Jean Valjean.
As was done in the
first recording of the Suite from Les Misérables, the charming Musique
chez Gillenormand was played again by a reduced ensemble of eight strings,
six wind instruments, harp and piano, in order to recreate the chamber effect
as it would have been in the film, although actually there it is badly edited,
abridged and almost inaudible.
With this complete
recording of a master film score from the Thirties, one can only hope that
interest in this genre will be more seriously extended to other classic
European film composers as well. There have been splendid re-recorded editions
of great Hollywood film scores, and, incidentally, still not enough of the good
ones, but I suppose that there are quite a few composers from Hollywood, who would
have turned pale at hearing what was done in Europe at the same time in a field
where they considered themselves the masters. Those European masters,
incidentally, also provided their own excellent orchestrations.
Adriano
Slovak Radio Symphony
Orchestra (Bratislava)
The Slovak Radio
Symphony Orchestra (Bratislava), the oldest symphonic ensemble in Slovakia, was
founded in 1929 at the instance of Milos Ruppeldt and Oskar Nedbal, prominent
personalities in the sphere of music. The orchestra was first conducted by the
Prague conductor František Dyk and in the course of the past fifty years of its
existence has worked under the batons of several prominent Czech and Slovak
conductors. Ondrej Lenárd was appointed its conductor in 1970 and in 1977 its
conductor-in-chief .
Adriano
Swiss-born Adriano
began his artistic activities in the domains of the theatre and the graphic
arts. In music he was largely self-taught. When he was in his twenties, he was
urged by conductors such as Joseph Keilberth and Ernest Ansermet, who
recognized his gifts, to embrace a conducting career. Instead he became a
composer of stage, film and chamber music and also a record-producer for his
own gramophone label, Adriano Records. In the late 1970s he established himself
as a specialist on Ottorino Respighi, organizing a comprehensive exhibition and
publishing a discography. He has also orchestrated a song-cycle by Respighi.
For the past six years Adriano has worked as an Italian and French coach,
teacher and state assistant at the Zurich Opera House and its International
Opera Studio. His numerous efforts to promote little known music include an Old
Italian translation of Telemann's opera Pimpinone, which was premiered
in Italy in 1987. For a production of Galuppi's Il filosofo di campagna
at the Stuttgart Music Festival in 1988, Adriano conceived a theatrical
prologue in which he himself appeared as an actor.
Adriano is now a
regular guest of the Radio Bratislava Symphony Orchestra, mainly contributing
to a classic film music series for Marco Polo Records, in which it is planned
to include recordings of more than a dozen scores. Many of them were
rediscovered, edited or reconstructed by Adriano. His first album of film music
suites by Arthur Honegger met with an enthusiastic reception by the
international press.
(from a note by David
Nelson)