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"Unmasking Ravel: New Perspectives on the Music" fills a unique place in Ravel studies by combining critical interpretation and analytical focus. From the premiere of his works up to the present, Ravel has been associated with masks and the related notions of artifice and imposture. This has led scholars to perceive a lack of depth in his music and, consequently, to discourage investigation of his musical language. This volume balances and interweaves these modes of inquiry. Part 1, "Orientations and Influences," illuminates the sometimes contradictory aesthetic, biographical, and literary strands comprising Ravel's artistry and our understanding of it. Part 2, "Analytical Case Studies," engages representative works from Ravel's major genres using a variety of methodologies, focusing on structural process and his complex relation to stylistic convention. Part 3, "Interdisciplinary Studies," integrates musical analysis and art criticism, semiotics, and psychoanalysis in creating novel methodologies. Contributors include prominent scholars of Ravel's and fin-de-siècle music: Elliott Antokoletz, Gurminder Bhogal, Sigrun B. Heinzelmann, Volker Helbing, Steven Huebner, Peter Kaminsky, Barbara Kelly, David Korevaar, Daphne Leong, Michael Puri, and Lauri Suurpää. Peter Kaminsky is Professor of Music at the University of Connecticut, Storrs.
In La valse two aspects constitutive of Ravel's work converge in an ideal and characteristic manner: a tendency toward “distancing appropriation”—the ever-alienating incorporation of pre-found musical material into one's own musical language—and the formal conception of the “spiral,” with its acceleration and intensification toward a final culmination. The work is to a large extent choreographically shaped with tendencies toward caricature, the fateful, and the (self-)destructive to a degree that is singular in Ravel's oeuvre. This study will explore the aspects of distancing appropriation, spiral, and self-destruction.
Spiral Forms
Repetition, circular motion, and dance shaped Ravel's music at least since the Habanera (1895). These tendencies became integral to an unmistakable musical physiognomy as soon as Ravel succeeded in (1) making them serve in larger linear contexts; (2) differentiating the circular figures and functionally adjoining them to one another; and (3) developing formal conceptions that accommodated the choreographic orientation of the music. One of these formal conceptions, which I shall designate as the “spiral,” first appears primarily in finales: in the third movement of the Sonatine (1905), “Feria” (Rapsodie espagnole, 1907), “Scarbo” (Gaspard de la nuit, 1908), the “Danse guerrière” and “Danse générale” from both suites from Daphnis et Chloé (1912), and the “Toccata” from Le tombeau de Couperin (1917). All of these compositions combine a tendency toward periodicity with a prevailing escalating, teleological direction entailing all dimensions of the work.
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