Pavane pour une infante défunte
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Pavane pour une infante défunte (English: Pavane for a Dead Princess) is a well-known piece for solo piano written by the French composer Maurice Ravel. The Pavane was composed in 1899 when Ravel was studying composition at the Conservatoire de Paris under Gabriel Fauré. In 1910, Ravel also published an orchestrated version of the Pavane. A typical performance of the piece lasts around six minutes.
The piece evokes the dignified elegance of a reception at the royal Spanish court, as a young princess moves gracefully through the steps of the pavane, a slow processional dance that enjoyed great popularity in the courts of Europe during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. This antique miniature is not meant to pay tribute to any particular princess from history, but rather expresses a nostalgic enthusiasm for Spanish customs and sensibilities which Ravel shared with many of his contemporaries (most notably Debussy, de Séverac, and Albéniz) and expounded in some of his other works, such as the Rapsodie espagnole and Boléro. By some accounts, Ravel may have been thinking about Princess Margarita, a daughter of King Philip IV of Spain.
Ravel dedicated the Pavane to his patron, the Princesse de Polignac. The Spanish pianist Ricardo Viñes gave the first performance on April 5, 1902. The Pavane was warmly welcomed by the public, but received much more subdued reviews from Ravel's fellow musicians. Indeed, Ravel himself complained that it "lacked daring". Subsequent performances have tended to be much too slow and plodding. In one instance, Ravel attended just such a performance, and afterward mentioned to the pianist that it was called "Pavane for a Dead Princess," not, "Dead Pavane for a Princess."
[edit] Interpretations
In 1972 guitarists John Williams and Julian Bream recorded the Pavane as a duo for two guitars, on their album Together.
In 1973 Brazilian jazz musician Eumir Deodato recorded the Pavane on his second album Deodato 2.
In 1979 Japanese electronic musician Isao Tomita recorded an electronic version of the Pavane on his Daphnis et Chloé album.
In 1997 British opera singer Lesley Garrett recorded a specially arranged version for the Tribute album dedicated to Diana, Princess of Wales who had died in August that year, and guitarist Ottmar Liebert recorded it on his album Leaning Into The Night.
In 2000, electronic musician William Orbit arranged the piece for his album of ambient electronic arrangements of "classical" pieces, Pieces in a Modern Style. It was subsequently released as a single, with a different arrangement.
A recording of the work played by Ravel himself has survived on piano rolls. This recording has been available on CD since April 2004.