Les Apaches
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- This article is about the group of French artists. For other uses of apache, please see Apache (disambiguation).
Les Apaches or (Societe des Apaches) was a group of French musicians, writers and artists which formed around 1900. Members of the group included:
- Edouard Benedictus, painter and composer
- M.D. Calvocoressi, writer and music critic
- Maurice Delage, composer
- Manuel de Falla, composer
- Léon-Paul Fargue, poet
- Lucien Garban, publisher
- Désiré-Emile Inghelbrecht, conductor
- Pierre Haour
- Gomez de Riquet (an imaginary member)
- Tristan Klingsor, poet, painter, art theorist
- Maurice Ravel, composer and pianist
- Florent Schmitt, composer
- Paul Sordes, painter
- Igor Stravinsky, composer
- Ricardo Viñes, pianist
- Emile Vuillermoz, music critic
The name was taken up by the group after inadvertently bumping into a newspaper seller who exclaimed "Attention les apaches". They soon adapted the name, meaning hooligans. Their most distinguished member, Ravel, suggested that they adopt the first melody of the Borodin 2nd Symphony as their theme, an idea to which they all agreed. The group met each Saturday, most often at the home of Sordes; alternately, they would meet at that of Klingsor.
The group had rallied around Claude Debussy's opera Pelleas et Melisande in a particularly controversial effort. Ravel dedicated the movements of his piano work Miroirs to members of the Apaches.
[edit] References
- Spiers, John. Maurice-ravel.net Retrieved 2004-11-16.
- "Maurice Ravel." Contemporary Musicians, Volume 25. Gale Group, 1999. Reproduced in Biography Resource Center. Farmington Hills, Mich.: Thomson Gale. 2005.