PROGRAM NOTES

Maurice Ravel –

Composition History

Ravel composed Alborada del gracioso as a piece in 1905 and orchestrated it in 1918. The first performance of the orchestral version was given in on May 17, 1919. The score calls for three flutes and piccolo, two and english horn, two clarinets, two and , four horns, two , three and , timpani, crotales, triangle, tambourine, , side drum, cymbals, bass drum, xylophone, two harps, and strings. Performance time is approximately seven minutes.

Performance History

The Chicago Symphony ’s first subscription concert performances of Ravel’s Alborada del gracioso were given at Orchestra Hall on March 6 and 7, 1925, with Frederick Stock conducting. Our most recent subscription concert performances were given on September 22 and 27, 2005, with Daniel Barenboim conducting. The Orchestra first performed this work at the Ravinia Festival on July 15, 1938, with Willem van Hoogstraten conducting, and most recently on July 26, 1990, with conducting.

For the record

The Chicago Symphony Orchestra recorded Ravel’s Alborada del gracioso in 1957 with conducting for RCA, in 1968 with conducting for RCA, and in 1991 with Daniel Barenboim conducting for Erato.

Maurice Ravel

Born March 7, 1875, , . Died December 28, 1937, Paris, France.

Alborada del gracioso

Maurice Ravel was born in the French Pyrenees, only a few miles from the Spanish border, a geographical boundary he often crossed in his music. Even though his family moved to Paris while he was still a baby, Ravel came by his fascination with Spain naturally, for his mother was Basque and grew up in Madrid. (His Swiss father inspired in his son a love for things precise and mechanical that carried over into his impeccable music, provoking Stravinsky to dismiss him as a “Swiss watchmaker.”)

In 1905 Ravel composed a set of five piano pieces he called (Mirrors), which included some of the earliest of the Spanish music he wrote from the comfort of his Paris apartment. Alborada del gracioso, one of the three pieces which he later transcribed for full orchestra, immediately became one of his most popular works. The original piano version, with its impossibly fast repeated notes (it remains a challenge to all but the most skilled ), is so rich and evocative that orchestrating it must have seemed redundant at first. But, perhaps more than any musician of his time, Ravel had an extraordinary ear for sonority and color. The newly redecorated Alborada is one of his greatest sonic achievements.

Alborada means morning music, just as serenade means . It’s related to the French aubade and the troubadour’s alba (literally “white of dawn”), by which means lovers are warned of the approaching dawn in time to dampen their passions and part company. (This requires the participation of a loyal watchman or friend—like Brangäne in Tristan and Isolde, whose warnings are famously ignored.) In the more common Spanish tradition, it’s simply any music performed at daybreak, often to celebrate a festival or honor a person—or both, such as a bride on her wedding day. To his Alborada, however, Ravel adds del gracioso, or “of the buffoon,” clouding the picture with the introduction of the standard grotesque lover, akin to Don Quixote of ancient Castillian comedy. And so we have a highly spirited, almost outrageous dance that begins with the strumming of a guitar (here given to the pizzicato strings and the harp) and concluding with a grand and glorious racket.

Phillip Huscher is the program annotator for the Chicago Symphony Orchestra.

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These notes appear in galley files and may contain typographical or other errors. Programs and artists subject to change without notice.