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University of California Press

About the Book

Gabriel Fauré’s mélodies offer an inexhaustible variety of style and expression that have made them the foundation of the French art song repertoire. During the second half of his long career, Fauré composed all but a handful of his songs within six carefully integrated cycles. Fauré moved systematically through his poetic contemporaries, exhausting Baudelaire’s Les fleurs du mal before immersing himself in the Parnassian poets. He would set nine poems by Armand Silvestre in swift succession (1878-84), seventeen by Paul Verlaine (1887-94), and eighteen by Charles Van Lerberghe (1906-14). As an artist deeply engaged with some of the most important cultural issues of the period, Fauré reimagined his musical idiom with each new poet and school, and his song cycles show the same sensitivity to the poetic material. Far more than Debussy, Ravel, or Poulenc, he crafted his song cycles as integrated works, reordering poems freely and using narratives, key schemes, and even leitmotifs to unify the individual songs. The Fauré Song Cycles explores the peculiar vision behind each synthesis of music and verse, revealing the astonishing imagination and insight of Fauré’s musical readings. This book offers not only close readings of Fauré’s musical works but an interdisciplinary study of how he responded to the changing schools and aesthetic currents of French poetry.

About the Author

Stephen Rumph is Associate Professor of Music History at the University of Washington. He is the author of Beethoven after Napoleon: Political Romanticism in the Late Works and Mozart and Enlightenment Semiotics. He is also the coeditor of Fauré Studies, part of the Cambridge Composer Series.

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Table of Contents

List of Music Examples
Preface
Acknowledgments

1. Romancing the mélodie 
A Hugo Cycle?

2. Ascending Parnassus 
Poème d’un jour, op. 21

3. The Discovery of Music
Cinq mélodies "de Venise," op. 58

4. Wagnerian correspondances
La bonne chanson, op. 61

5. Theatrical Song
La chanson d’Ève, op. 95

6. Writing in the Sand
Le jardin clos, op. 106

7. Neoclassical Voyages
Mirages, op. 113 and L’horizon chimérique, op. 118

Notes
Bibliography
Index

Reviews

"A highly important reconsideration. Nobody before has properly addressed the intensity of Fauré’s engagement with literature and poetry, particularly in terms of showing how it operates musically."—Roy Howat, author of The Art of French Piano Music: Debussy, Ravel, Fauré, Chabrier

"This book offers an excellent, at times brilliant, contribution to the understanding of Fauré as a singularly inventive composer of song cycles, and a sophisticated compositional ‘reader’ of poetry."—David J. Code, Reader in Music, University of Glasgow