Stig Östlund

måndag, augusti 22, 2011



Erik Alfred Leslie Satie (1866-1925); born May 17, 1866 in Honfleur, Basse-Normandie, France,  Erik Satie  was  a  music composer, and a  performing pianist,  though  mainly  for  café- and  cabaret audiences.  Satie  wrote theatre  and ballet  music,  as well as piano music. His compositions are  original,  humorous,  often bizarre,  and very minimalistic.  His music  is sometimes  called  furniture  music,  supposed to be  in  the  background  of everyday life.  It  is  evidently anti-romantic and also  anti-impressionistic.
Satie  eventually  became a  leading  figure  of  the French avant-garde.  He  did not  begin  to be  taken  seriously as a composer by  his contemporaries  until  he wa s in his forties.  In  1917 the  first  performance  in  Paris of the ballet Parade (the orchestration of which included parts for typewriter,  foghorn  and rattle)  caused  a scandal, which  established  his name  as  a composer.  Satie wrote this  ballet togethe r with  Jean Cocteau  and  Pablo Picasso  for the  Russian  impresario  Diaghilev,  leader of the Ballets Russes.  His  other  works include:  Trois Gymnopédies (1888), piano;  Trois morceaux en forme de poire (1901),  piano four hands;  Messe des Pauvres (1895);  Descriptions Automatiques (1913),  piano; Sonatine Bureaucratique (1917), piano; Socrate (1918), symphonic drama; Relâche (1924), ballet.  Recordings of  his complete  works  have recently been published on Swedish Society Discofil, performed by Olof Hojer.
Satie gave his piano pieces names like Unpleasant Glimpses, Genuine Flabby Preludes (for a dog),  or  Old Sequins  and  Old Breastplates. He accompanied  the  scores of  these  pieces  with  all  kinds of  written remarks,  through  which he  insisted  that  these should  not  be read  out during  performance.


 It is a well-documented  fact that  every day  of his working  life Satie left his apartment  in the  Parisian suburb  of  Arcueil  to walk  across the whole of  Paris to  either Montmartre or Montparnasse  before walking  back again  in the evening.  Satie  was known as  an eccentric,  and  amongst other things  he started  his own  church  (with himself as only member). Debussy  and Ravel  were among  his friends.  He was not  hailed by  the masses,  but was  admired by many  young composers  and  musicians. In fact,  Satie was  the center of  the Groupe  des Six,  a group of  six  French composers  (Auric, Durey, Honegger, Germaine Tailleferre, Milhaud and Poulenc.  The group  advocated clear  musical language,  and opposed impressionism  (for example Debussy and Ravel ), slavism (Stravinsky)  and post-Wagnerism  (Schönberg)  in music.


Erik Satie died on July 1, 1925 and  is buried in Cimetiere d'Arcueil, Arcueil, France.




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