XXII
CLAUDE ACHILLE DEBUSSY
"I love music too much to speak of it otherwise than
passionately."
DEBUSSY
"Art is always progressive; it cannot return to the past, which
is definitely dead. Only imbeciles and cowards look backward.
Then—Let us work!"
DEBUSSY
It is difficult to learn anything of the boyhood and youth of this rare
French composer. Even his young manhood and later life were so guarded and
secluded that few outside his intimate circle knew much of the man, except
as mirrored in his music. After all that is just as the composer wished, to
be known through his compositions, for in them he revealed himself. They are
transparent reflections of his character, his aims and ideals.
Only the barest facts of his early life can be told. We know that he was
born at Saint Germain-en-Laye, France, August 22, 1862. From the very
beginning he seemed precociously gifted in music, and began at a very early
age to study the piano. His first lessons on the instrument were received
from Mme. de Sivry, a former pupil of Chopin. At ten he entered the Paris
Conservatoire, obtaining his Solfège medals in 1874, '75, and '76, under
Lavignac; a second prize for piano playing from Marmontel in 1877, a first
prize for accompanying in 1880; an accessory prize for counterpoint and
fugue in 1882, and finally the Grande Prix de Rome, with his cantata,
"L'Enfant Prodigue," in 1884, as a pupil of Guirand.
Thus in twelve years, or at the age of twenty-two, the young musician was
thoroughly furnished for a career. He had worked through carefully, from the
beginning to the top, with thoroughness and completeness, gaining his
honors, slowly, step by step. All this painstaking care, this overcoming of
the technical difficulties of his art, is what gave him such complete
command and freedom in using the medium of tone and harmony, in his unique
manner.
While at work in Paris, young Debussy made an occasional side trip to
another country. In 1879 he visited Russia, where he learned to know the
music of that land, yet undreamed of by the western artists. When his turn
came to go to Rome, for which honor he secured the prize, he sent home the
required compositions, a Symphonic Suite "Spring," and a lyric poem for a
woman's voice, with chorus and orchestra, entitled "La Demoiselle Elue."
From the first Claude Debussy showed himself a rare spirit, who looked at
the subject of musical art from a different angle than others had done. For
one thing he must have loved nature with whole souled devotion, for he
sought to reflect her moods and inspirations in his compositions. Once he
said: "I prefer to hear a few notes from an Egyptian shepherd's flute, for
he is in accord with his scenery and hears harmonies unknown to your
treatises. Musicians too seldom turn to the music inscribed in nature. It
would benefit them more to watch a sunrise than to listen to a performance
of the Pastorale Symphony. Go not to others for advice but take counsel of
the passing breezes, which relate the history of the world to those who can
listen."
Again he says, in a way that shows what delight he feels in beauty that
is spontaneous and natural:
"I lingered late one autumn evening in the country, irresistibly
fascinated by the magic of old world forests. From yellowing leaves,
fluttering earthward, celebrating the glorious agony of the trees, from the
clangorous angelus bidding the fields to slumber, rose a sweet persuasive
voice, counseling perfect oblivion. The sun was setting solitary. Beasts and
men turned peacefully homeward, having accomplished their impersonal tasks."
When as a youth Debussy was serving with his regiment in France, he
relates of the delight he experienced in listening to the tones of the
bugles and bells. The former sounded over the camp for the various military
duties; the latter belonged to a neighboring convent and rang out daily for
services. The resonance of the bugles and the far-reaching vibrations of the
bells, with their overtones and harmonics, were specially noted by the young
musician, and used by him later in his music. It is a well-known fact that
every tone or sound is accompanied by a whole series of other sounds; they
are the vibrations resulting from the fundamental tone. If the tone C is
played in the lower octave of the piano, no less than sixteen overtones
vibrate with it. A few of these are audible to the ordinary listener, but
very keen ears will hear more of them. In Claude Debussy's compositions, his
system of harmony and tonality is intimately connected with these laws of
natural harmonics. His chords, for instance, are remarkable for their
shifting, vapory quality; they seem to be on the border land between major
and minor—consonance and dissonance; again they often appear to float in the
air, without any resolution whatever. It was a new aspect of music, a new
style of chord progression. At the same time the young composer was well
versed in old and ancient music; he knew all the old scales, eight in
number, and used them in his compositions with compelling charm. The
influence of the old Gregorian chant has given his music a certain fluidity,
free rhythm, a refinement, richness and variety peculiarly its own.
We can trace impressions of early life in Debussy's music, through his
employment of the old modes, the bell sounds which were familiar to his
boyhood, and also circumstances connected with his later life. As a student
in Rome, he threw himself into the study of the music of Russian composers,
especially that of Moussorgsky; marks of the Oriental coloring derived from
these masters appear in his own later music. When he returned to Paris for
good, he reflected in music the atmosphere of his environment. By interest
and temperament he was in sympathy with the impressionistic school in art,
whether it be in painting, literature or in music. In Debussy's music the
qualities of impressionism and symbolism are very prominent. He employs
sounds as though they were colors, and blends them in such a way as
literally to paint a picture in tones, through a series of shaded, many-hued
chord progressions. Fluid, flexible, vivid, these beautiful harmonies,
seemingly woven of refracted rays of light, merge into shadowy melody, and
free, flowing rhythm.
What we first hear in Debussy's music, is the strangeness of the harmony,
the use of certain scales, not so much new as unfamiliar. Also the
employment of sequences of fifths or seconds. He often takes his subjects
from nature, but in this case seems to prefer a sky less blue and a
landscape more atmospheric than those of Italy, more like his native France.
His music, when known sufficiently, will reveal a sense of proportion,
balance and the most exquisite taste. It may lack strength at times, it may
lack outbursts of passion and intensity, but it is the perfection of
refinement.
Mr. Ernest Newman, in writing of Debussy, warmly praises the delightful
naturalness of his early compositions. "One would feel justified in building
the highest hopes on the young genius who can manipulate so easily the
beautiful shapes his imagination conjures up."
The work of the early period shows Debussy developing freely and
naturally. The independence of his thinking is unmistakable, but it does not
run into wilfulness. There is no violent break with the past, but simply the
quickening of certain French qualities by the infusion of a new personality.
It seemed as if a new and charming miniaturist had appeared, who was doing
both for piano and song what had never been done before. The style of the
two Arabesques and the more successful of the Ariettes oubliées is perfect.
A liberator seemed to have come into music, to take up, half a century
later, the work of Chopin—the work of redeeming the art from the excessive
objectivity of German thought, of giving it not only a new soul but a new
body, swift, lithe and graceful. And that this exquisitely clear, pellucid
style could be made to carry out not only gaiety and whimsicality but
emotion of a deeper sort, is proved by the lovely "Clair de Lune."
Among Debussy's best known compositions are "The Afternoon of a Faun,"
composed in 1894 and called his most perfect piece for orchestra, which he
never afterward surpassed. There are also Three Nocturnes for orchestra. In
piano music, as we have briefly shown, he created a new school for the
player. All the way from the two Arabesques just mentioned, through "Gardens
in the Rain," "The Shadowy Cathedral," "A Night in Granada," "The Girl with
Blond Hair," up to the two books of remarkable Preludes, it is a new world
of exotic melody and harmony to which he leads the way. "Art must be hidden
by art," said Rameau, long ago, and this is eminently true in Debussy's
music.
Debussy composed several works for the stage, one of which was "Martyrdom
of Saint Sebastien," but his "Pélleas and Mélisande" is the one supreme
achievement in the lyric drama. As one of his critics writes: "The reading
of the score of 'Pélleas and Mélisande' remains for me one of the most
marvelous lessons in French art: it would be impossible for him to express
more with greater restraint of means." The music, which seems so
complicated, is in reality very simple. It sounds so shadowy and impalpable,
but it is really built up with as sure control as the most classic work. It
is indeed music which appeals to refined and sensitive temperaments.
This mystical opera was produced in Paris, at the Opéra Comique, in
April, 1902, and at once made a sensation. It had any number of performances
and still continues as one of the high lights of the French stage. Its fame
soon reached America, and the first performance was given in New York in
1907, with a notable cast of singing actors, among whom Mary Garden, as the
heroine gave an unforgettable, poetic interpretation.
Many songs have been left us by this unique composer. He was especially
fond of poetry and steeped himself in the verse of Verlaine, Villon,
Baudelaire and Mallarmé. He chose the most unexpected, the most subtle, and
wedded it to sounds which invariably expressed the full meaning. He breathed
the breath of life into these vague, shadowy poems, just as he made
Maeterlinck's "Pélleas" live again.
As the years passed, Claude Debussy won more and more distinction as a
unique composer, but also gained the reputation of being a very unsociable
man. Physically it has been said that in his youth he seemed like an
Assyrian Prince; through life he retained his somewhat Asiatic appearance.
His eyes were slightly narrowed, his black hair curled lightly over an
extremely broad forehead. He spoke little and often in brusque phrase. For
this reason he was frequently misunderstood, as the irony and sarcasm with
which he sometimes spoke did not tend to make friends. But this attitude was
only turned toward those who did not comprehend him and his ideals, or who
endeavored to falsify what he believed in and esteemed.
A friend of the artist writes:
"I met Claude Debussy for the first time in 1906. Living myself in a
provincial town, I had for several years known and greatly admired some of
the songs and the opera, 'Pélleas and Mélisande,' and I made each of my
short visits to Paris an opportunity of improving my acquaintance with these
works. A young composer, André Caplet, with whom I had long been intimate,
proposed to introduce me to Debussy; but the rumors I had heard about the
composer's preferred seclusion always made me refuse in spite of my great
desire to know him. I now had a desire to express the feelings awakened in
me, and to communicate to others, by means of articles and lectures, my
admiration for, and my belief in, the composer and his work. The result was
that one day, in 1906, Debussy let me know through a friend, that he would
like to see me. From that day began our friendship."
Later the same friend wrote:
"Debussy was invited to appear at Queen's Hall with the London Symphony
Orchestra, on February 1, 1908, to conduct his 'Afternoon of a Faun,' and
'The Sea.' The ovation he received from the English public was exceptional.
I can still see him in the lobby, shaking hands with friends after the
concert, trying to hide his emotion, and saying repeatedly: 'How nice they
are—how nice they are!'"
He went again the next year to London, but the state of his health
prevented his going anywhere else. For a malady, which finally proved fatal,
seemed to attack the composer when in his prime, and eventually put an end
to his work. We cannot guess what other art works he might have created. But
there must be some that have not yet seen the light. It is known that he was
wont to keep a composition for some time in his desk, correcting and letting
it ripen, until he felt it was ready to be brought out.
One of his cherished dreams had been to compose a "Tristan."
The characters of Tristan and Iseult are primarily taken from a French
legend. Debussy felt the story was a French heritage and should be restored
to its original atmosphere and idea. This it was his ardent desire to
accomplish.
Debussy passed away March 26, 1918.
Since his desire to create a Tristan has been made impossible, let us
cherish the rich heritage of piano, song and orchestral works, which this
original French artist and thinker has left behind, to benefit art and his
fellow man.