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Impressionist Music

5.2K views 40 replies 21 participants last post by  Eschbeg  
#1 ·
Ok, so maybe that's a bit of a dirty label, Debussy certainly didn't like it, but I think it's the best one I have for the kind of music I really enjoy. I need help in finding more composers and pieces to listen to, deep cuts as it were. I know Debussy, Ravel, Satie, Roussel, Dukas, Honegger, Faure etc I've listened to some of the works of Les Six, which were supposedly a move away from Impressionism but I must be too 'cloth eared' to recognise the difference. I am also well acquainted with the Spanish composers of the period like Falla, Ibert, Granados, Albeniz, Turina. I've heard Respighi. What else can I listen to that has the Impressionist vibe to it?
 
#3 · (Edited)
I'll mention a composer and a good introduction to his work


Griffes - three tone pictures
Delius - walk to the paradise garden
Koechlin - les heures persanes
Sorabji - Gulistan
Szymanowsky - third symphony
Scriabin - Prometheus
Tomasi - Trumpet concerto
Fanelli (the man who inspired Debussy) - Tableaux symphoniques
I think that Messiaen and Takemitsu too could be mentioned, at least for certain works.
 
#9 · (Edited)
I'll mention a composer and a good introduction to his work

Griffes - three tone pictures
Delius - walk to the paradise garden
Koechlin - les heures persanes
Sorabji - Gulistan
Szymanowsky - third symphony
Scriabin - Prometheus
Tomasi - Trumpet concerto
Fanelli (the man who inspired Debussy) - Tableaux symphoniques
I think that Messiaen and Takemitsu too could be mentioned, at least for certain works.
Griffes and Koechlin! Classical music's best kept secrets, especially Koechlin.
 
#14 ·
Is Night Fantasies (Carter) an impressionist piece representing a sleepless night? How about Finnisy's Snowdrift?

Where I'm coming from is that the genre needs to be explained a bit.
I agree that it's a difficult thing to define and I'm far from an expert. To me it seems to be more a symphonic poem type of piece, think Debussy's Prelude to an afternoon of a faun, something that works on creating a feel rather than a logical progression through movements. Sometimes it's kind of nebulous I enjoy lots of hanging strings and ebbs and flows. I don't know if that helps and I certainly cannot explain it from a musicological point of view.
 
#27 ·
The relationship between the poetic and the musical features is quite a complex topic! When addressing the question of how to classify Satie's music, I felt that it might be useful to point out his harmonic affinities with composers who are widely recognized as impressionistic.

However, I certainly didn't mean to imply a one-to-one correspondence between a musical device and a poetic effect. The overall effect is more than the sum of the devices. Also, as you suggested in post #22, extramusical factors also contribute to the impressionistic aesthetic of a piece, such as the titles and the associated poetry (in the case of songs or tone poems with texts, like Afternoon of a Faun).
 
#26 ·
I second Charles Griffes. I've heard a bit of Frederick Mompou that sounded quite impressionistic. Certain works of Messiaen, but he had a wide variety of styles.

I agree, the "impressionist" style is one of my favorite things in all of classical music. It is something I can really feel.
 
#31 · (Edited)
Getting a chance to explore these recommendations slowly and so far I am absolutely loving Decaux (the only piece he ever published!!) and to a slightly lesser extent the Griffes. I'm currently listening to Koechlin's Les Heures Persane and it's also tremendous. Still got a long way to go but so far that Hamelin CD looks like an essential purchase. Many thanks to everyone, I love this kind of music.
 
#33 ·
Though I wouldn't label him impressionist, Scriabin's Preludes are quite Debussy-esque.

As for the word 'impressionism', the reason it fits so perfectly for me is that the music of Debussy and Ravel always always sounds to me like the perfect soundtrack to a Monet painting. It is impressionism in the visual arts in musical form and of the same time period so it makes sense whether Debussy or Ravel like it or not...:tiphat:
 
#38 ·
Spent all day listening to some of these pieces recommended. Some truly amazing music but quite a few of them are bit spiky and difficult I found. I was quite tired by the end of the day. Many thanks to everybody and don't hesitate to make any remark on what may be termed Impressionist music as I have a voracious appetite for new information. :D