- Ernest Reyer
Louis Étienne Ernest Reyer (
December 1 1823 –January 15 1909 ) was a Frenchopera composer and music critic.Biography
Ernest Reyer was born in
Marseille . His father, anotary , did not want his son take up a career in music. However, he did not block his son's ambitions and allowed him to attend classes at the Conservatoire from age six to sixteen. In 1839 , when he was 16 years old, Ernest traveled to north Africa to work under his brother-in-law Farrenc, head of accounting for the Treasury Department inAlgeria . The job was not a good fit with Reyer's temperament, who was nonchalant and undisciplined. From administrative documents, it is apparent that Reyer wrote innumerable youthful essays and stories, and original dance pieces. Some of his early compositins achieve local notariety and received favorable comments in the Algerian press, including a Mass performed at the catherdral that was performed for the arrival of the Duke of Aumale in 1847.He returned to
Paris during the events 1848. During this period, he was introduced to the bohemian artists of Paris, includingGustave Flaubert andThéophile Gautier . Southern France andProvence held its allure, and Reyer of returned to socialize with local people with whom he loved to play dominoes while smoking a pipe, which he said was his best source of inspiration.His aunt, Louise Farrenc, professor of piano at the
Conservatoire and a talented composer in her own right, directed Reyer's musical studies. In 1850, he composed a symphonic ode with choirs with text by Theophile Gautier, which was conducted by Sélam at the Théatre Italien. Four years later, in 1854, he composed music for an opera in one act, "Maître Wolfram" ("Master Wolfram"), whose libretto was byJoseph Méry . Hearing a performance of this work at theOpéra Comique , the teacher and composer,Hector Berlioz , recognized Reyer's talent. He said that the music of the composer from Marseille had "nothing in common with the somewhat affected, somewhat dilapidated approach the Paris muse [...] . His melodies are natural [...] . There's heart and imagination there."Gradually, some fame came Reyer's way. In 1857, the critic Charles Monselet wrote: "Is this a musician who writes, or a writer who makes music? I do not know, but I am hopeful that this spirited boy will make his way to singing and writing." Admittedly, Reyer was not (yet) unanimously praised and some critics pointed-out that his orchestration had not achieved a level of musical genius.
The following year he composed a ballet, "Sakountala", with a story, once again, by Theophile Gautier. The ballet was played twenty-four performances through to 1860.
In 1861, Reyer composed a comic opera in three acts and six scenes, "La Statue" ("The Statue"), whose plot was inspired by "
One Thousand and One Nights " (also knowns as: "Arabian Nights") with alibretto byMichel Carré andJules Barbier . In less than two years, "La Statue" achieved sixty performances, an impressive figure for the period.Reyer's work was finally universally recognized in 1862, and the composer Marseille became a chevalier of the
Legion of Honour . The same year, he composed "Erostrate", an opera in two acts, which was played in August 1862 inBaden-Baden , under the auspices of great families in Europe, which earned him the distinction of receiving the Red Eagle from the hands of the Queen of Prussia.Little by little, however, his reputation began to decline. The same "Érostate" failed completely in Paris and was staged for only three performances, which deprived the work of a possible production at the
Opéra .The best-known of his five operas is "Sigurd" (1884); it was quite popular in France during its initial production there (it had its premiere in
Brussels at the Théâtre de La Monnaie in January 1884), and is sometimes (although rarely) revived. "Sigurd" is based on theScandinavia n legends of theEdda Volsunga saga (Nibelungenlied ), the same source whichRichard Wagner drew upon for the libretto for hisRing cycle . The music of "Sigurd", however, is quite unlike the music of Wagner. While Reyer admired Wagner, he developed his music more along the lines of his mentor,Hector Berlioz . Listening to "Sigurd", one cannot help but hear echoes of "Les Troyens " or "Benvenuto Cellini", embued with the same heroic musical posture.Reyer's last opera was "Salammbô" (1890), based on the novel by
Gustave Flaubert , which achieved 46 performances from may to December 1892. The work had been composed several years earlier but had been met with initial resistance by administrators, as had "Sigurd". It was first performed at theThéâtre de la Monnaie inBrussels in 1890, and at the Théâtre des Arts inRouen .Reyer, unable to support himself on the proceeds from his operas, succeeded
Hector Berlioz as music critic at the "Journal des débats "; he also worked as the librarian at theAcadémie de musique .Other compositions by Reyer include a symphonic ode entitled "Le Sélam" for soprano, tenor, baritone, chorus & orchestra; a ballet entitled "Sacuntala" (also the title of a famous overture by
Karl Goldmark and of an opera byFranco Alfano ).elected compositions
*"Chœur des buveurs et chœurs des assiégés", ca. 1848.
*"Le Sélam", 1850.
*"Maître Wolfram", 1854.
*"Sakountala ", 1858.
*"Chant des paysans" (from "Les Volontaires de 1814" by V. Séjour), 1861.
*"La Statue", 1860.
*"Erostrate", 1862.
*"L'Hymne du Rhin", words by Méry, 1865.
*"La Madeleine au désert", poems by Ed. Blau, 1874.
*"Marche tzigane".
*"Recueil de mélodies et de fragments d'opéras".
*"Sigurd", 1884.
*"Salammbô", 1890.
*"Tristesse", poems by Ed. Blau, 1884.
*"L'Homme", poems by G. Boyer, 1892.
*"Trois sonnets", poems by C. du Locle.elected writings in French
*"Notes de musiques", Charpentier, 1875.
*"Notice sur Félicien David", Académie des Beaux-Arts, 17 November 1877.
*"Berlioz", Revue des Revues, 1 January 1894.
*"Quarante ans de musique (1857-1899)", posthumus publication with préface and notes by Henriot, Calmann-Lévy, 1910, in-8°.ources
*G. Kordes, "Ernest Reyer : progressiste ou conservateur ? Son esthétique de l'opéra réalisée dans Sigurd : Figures d'époque (Ernest Reyer : progressist or conservative? His aesthetics of opera in Sigurd : Figures of the epoch)", Bull. de la société Th.-Gautier, n°15, 1993.
*Henri de Curzon, « Ernest Reyer, sa vie et ses œuvres », "Revue de musicologie", 1924.
*C. E. Curinier, "Dictionnaire national des contemporains", 1899
*Charles Monselet, "La Lorgnette littéraire : dictionnaire des grands et des petits auteurs de mon temps", éd. Auguste Poulet-Malassis and Eugène de Broise, 1857, p. 188.
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