Georges Bizet
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Georges Bizet (October 25, 1838 – June 3, 1875) was a French composer and pianist of the romantic era. He is best known for the opera Carmen.
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[edit] Biography
Bizet was born in Paris at 28 Rue de la Tour d'Auvergne. He was registered with the legal name Alexandre-César-Léopold Bizet, but was baptized Georges Bizet and was always known by the latter name. He entered the Paris Conservatory of Music in 1848, a fortnight before his tenth birthday.
His first symphony, the Symphony in C Major, was written in 1855, when he was still only sixteen, evidently as a student assignment. It seems that Bizet completely forgot about it himself, and it was not discovered again until 1935, in the archives of the Conservatory library. Upon its first performance (26 February 1935), it was immediately hailed as a junior masterwork and a welcome addition to the early Romantic period repertoire. A delightful work (and a prodigious one, from a seventeen-year-old boy), the symphony is noteworthy for bearing an amazing stylistic resemblance to the music of Franz Schubert, whose work was virtually unknown in Paris at that time (with the possible exception of a few of his songs).
At the Conservatoire Bizet studied under Fromental Halévy, whose daughter Genéviève he later married. Halévy died in 1864, leaving his last opera Noé unfinished. Bizet completed it, but it was not performed until 1885, ten years after Bizet's own death.
In 1857 a setting of the one-act operetta Le docteur Miracle won him a share in a prize offered by Jacques Offenbach. He also won the Music Composition scholarship of the Prix de Rome, the conditions of which required him to study in Rome for three years. There, his talent developed as he wrote such works as the opera Don Procopio (1858-59). There he also composed his only major sacred work, Te Deum (1858), which he submitted to the Prix Rodrigues competition, a contest for Prix de Rome winners only. Bizet failed to win the Prix, and the Te Deum score remained unpublished until 1971. He made two attempts to write another symphony in 1859, but destroyed the manuscripts in December of that year. Apart from this period in Rome, Bizet lived in the Paris area all his life.
His mother died shortly after his return to Paris. He composed the opera Les pêcheurs de perles (The Pearl Fishers) for the Theatre-Lyrique in 1863, which was an initial failure. He followed it with La jolie fille de Perth (1867), a symphony titled Roma (1868), and Jeux d'enfants (Children's games) for piano duet (1871).
The popular L'Arlésienne was originally produced as incidental music for a play by Alphonse Daudet, first performed on 1 October 1872. Bizet himself derived a suite from the music (first performed 10 November 1872), and Ernest Guiraud later arranged a second suite; both these suites contain considerable rewriting of the original score.
That year (22 May 1872) also saw the production of the romantic opera Djamileh, which is often seen as a precursor to Carmen. His overture Patrie was written in 1873 (it had no connection with Victorien Sardou's play of the same name.
His widow Genéviève later had an alliance with Élie-Miriam Delaborde, generally believed to have been the illegitimate son of Charles-Valentin Alkan, but married a banker with Rothschild connections and became a noted society hostess. Marcel Proust used her as a model for the Duchesse de Guermantes in his roman fleuve A la recherche du temps perdu. The Bizets' son Jacques had been a a school-friend of Proust.
Bizet's music has been used in the twentieth century as the basis for several important ballets. The Soviet-era "Carmen Suite" (1967), set to music drawn from Carmen arranged by Rodion Shchedrin, gave the Bolshoi ballerina Maya Plisetskaya one of her signature roles; it was choreographed by Alberto Alonso. In the West the "L'Arlesienne" of Roland Petit is well-regarded, and the "Symphony in C" by George Balanchine is considered to be one of the great ballets of the twentieth century. It was first presented as Le Palais de Crystal by the Paris Opera Ballet in 1947, and has been in the repertory there ever since. The ballet has no story; it simply fits the music: each movement of the symphony has its own ballerina, cavalier, and Corps de Ballet, all of whom dance together in the finale.
[edit] Stage works
- La prêtresse, operetta (1854)
- Le docteur Miracle, opéra bouffe (1857)
- Don Procopio, opéra bouffe (1859)
- Les pêcheurs de perles, opera (1863)
- Ivan IV, grand opera (unfinished)
- La jolie fille de Perth, opera (1867)
- Noé, opera by Fromental Halévy finished by Bizet (1869)
- L'Arlésienne, 'musique de scène' (1872)
- Djamileh, one-act opera (1872)
- Carmen, opera (1875)
[edit] Media
- Problems playing the files? See media help.
| The Toreador Song | |
| Image:Toreador song.ogg | |
| From Carmen | |
| Entr'acte | |
| Image:Entra'cte to Act III from Carmen.ogg | |
| The Entr'acte to Act III from Carmen | |
| Entr'acte | |
| Image:Entra'cte to Act IV from Carmen.ogg | |
| The Entr'acte to Act IV from Carmen | |
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Georges Bizet
- Georges Bizet (1838-1875)
- Bizet Biography
- Georges Bizet's Gravesite
- Mina Curtiss collection (research materials used by one of Bizet's biographers) in the Music Division of The New York Public Library for the Peforming Arts.
- Lettres à un ami, 1865-1872 (French) at Gutenberg.org
[edit] Free sheet music
- Bizet was listed in the International Music Score Library Project
- Georges Bizet free scores in the Choral Public Domain Library (ChoralWiki)
- Georges Bizet free scores in the Werner Icking Music Archive
| Persondata | |
|---|---|
| NAME | Bizet, Georges |
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Bizet, Alexandre-César-Léopold |
| SHORT DESCRIPTION | Composer, Conductor |
| DATE OF BIRTH | October 25, 1838 |
| PLACE OF BIRTH | Paris, France |
| DATE OF DEATH | June 3, 1875 |
| PLACE OF DEATH | Bougival, France |
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