Rapsodie espagnole
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Rapsodie espagnole (alternatively spelt 'Rhapsodie') is an orchestral rhapsody written by Maurice Ravel. Composed between 1907 and 1908, the Rapsodie represents one of Ravel's first major works for orchestra.
The Rapsodie reflects the profound influence of the Spanish musical heritage that was imparted to Ravel by his Basque mother. As a child, Ravel would listen to his mother sing him folk songs from her country. Later works by Ravel such as Boléro and the opera L'heure espagnole also claim similar sources of inspiration. Ravel composed his Rapsodie only a year before Claude Debussy appeared with his own evocations of Spain in Iberia.
The first version of the Rapsodie was written for two pianos during the summer of 1907, and was quickly followed by a transcription for orchestra. Ravel dedicated the work to Charles Wilfrid de Bériot, professor of piano and composition and son of the renowned Belgian violinist Charles Auguste de Bériot.
The premiere of the Rapsodie was given by the Orchestre des Concerts Colonne, conducted by Édouard Colonne, at the Chatelet Theatre on March 5, 1908. Although the work attracted only limited popular acclaim, it was highly appreciated by the Spanish composer Manuel de Falla.
The Rapsodie comprises four parts and a performance usually lasts around 15 minutes:
- Prélude à la nuit: très modéré
- Malaguena: assez vif
- Habanera: assez lent et d'un rythme las
- Feria: assez animé.
The second part is a dance, resembling the fandango immortalized in the folklore of Málaga. The third part is an orchestration of a habanera written for two pianos in 1895 which was originally designed as the first of two "suites auriculaires."