Les Six

Le Groupe des six, 1921 painting by Jacques-Émile Blanche. Only five of Les Six are represented; Louis Durey was not present. In the center: pianist Marcelle Meyer. On the left, from bottom to top: Germaine Tailleferre, Darius Milhaud, Arthur Honegger, Jean Wiener. On the right, standing Francis Poulenc, Jean Cocteau; and seated Georges Auric.[1]

Les Six (pronounced: [le sis]) is a name given to a group of six French composers who worked in Montparnasse. The name, inspired by Mily Balakirev's The Five, originates in critic Henri Collet's 1920 article "Les cinq Russes, les six Français et M. Satie" (Comoedia, 16 January 1920). Their music is often seen as a reaction against the musical style of Richard Wagner and the impressionist music of Claude Debussy and Maurice Ravel.

The members were Georges Auric (1899–1983), Louis Durey (1888–1979), Arthur Honegger (1892–1955), Darius Milhaud (1892–1974), Francis Poulenc (1899–1963), and Germaine Tailleferre (1892–1983).

Les nouveaux jeunes

In 1917, when many theatres and concert halls were closed because of World War I, Blaise Cendrars and the painter Moïse Kisling decided to put on concerts at 6 rue Huyghens, the studio of the painter Émile Lejeune (1885–1964). For the first of these events, the walls of the studio were decorated with canvases by Picasso, Matisse, Léger, Modigliani and others. Music by Erik Satie, Honegger, Auric and Durey was played. It was this concert that gave Satie the idea of assembling a group of composers around himself to be known as Les nouveaux jeunes, forerunners of Les Six.

Les Six

According to Milhaud:

[Collet] chose six names absolutely arbitrarily, those of Auric, Durey, Honegger, Poulenc, Tailleferre and me simply because we knew each other and we were pals and appeared on the same musical programmes, no matter if our temperaments and personalities weren't at all the same! Auric and Poulenc followed ideas of Cocteau, Honegger followed German Romanticism, and myself, Mediterranean lyricism!
Ivry 1996

But that is only one reading of how the Groupe des Six originated: other authors, like Ornella Volta, stressed the manoeuvrings of Jean Cocteau to become the leader of an avant-garde group devoted to music, like the cubist and surrealist groups which had sprung up in visual arts and literature shortly before, with Pablo Picasso, Guillaume Apollinaire and André Breton as their key representatives. The fact that Satie had abandoned the Nouveaux jeunes less than a year after starting the group, was the "gift from heaven" that made it all come true for Cocteau: his 1918 publication Le coq et l'Arlequin is said to have ticked it off.

After World War I, Jean Cocteau and Les Six began to frequent a bar known as "La gaya" which became Le Bœuf sur le Toit (The Ox on the Roof) when the establishment moved to larger quarters. As the famous ballet by Milhaud had been conceived at the old premises, the new bar took on the name of Milhaud's ballet.[2] On the renamed bar's opening night, pianist Jean Wiéner played tunes by George Gershwin and Vincent Youmans while Cocteau and Milhaud played percussion. Among those in attendance were impresario Serge Diaghilev, artist Pablo Picasso, filmmaker René Clair, singer Jane Bathori, and actor and singer Maurice Chevalier.

The Group was officially launched in January 1920 by a series of two articles by the French music critic and composer Henri Collet in the French journal Commedia. While it seems apparent that Cocteau was behind these articles, the actual name of the Group was selected by Collet, who decided to compare Les Six with the five Russians.

Collaborations

Although the group did not exist in order to work on compositions collaboratively, there were six occasions spread over 36 years on which at least some members of the group did work together on the same project. On only one of these occasions was the entire Groupe des Six involved; in some others, composers from outside the group also participated.

Auric and Poulenc were involved in all six of these collaborations, Milhaud in five, Honegger and Tailleferre in three, but Durey in only one.

1920: L'Album des Six

In 1920 the group published an album of piano pieces together, known as L'Album des Six. This was the only work in which all six composers collaborated.

  1. Prélude (1919) – Auric
  2. Romance sans paroles, Op. 21 (1919) – Durey
  3. Sarabande, H 26 (1920) – Honegger
  4. Mazurka (1914) – Milhaud
  5. Valse in C, FP 17 (1919) – Poulenc
  6. Pastorale, Enjoué (1919) – Tailleferre

1921: Les mariés de la tour Eiffel

In 1921, five of the members jointly composed the music for Cocteau's ballet Les mariés de la tour Eiffel, which was produced by the Ballets suédois, the rival to the Ballet Russes. Cocteau had originally proposed the project to Auric, but as Auric did not finish rapidly enough to fit into the rehearsal schedule, he then divided the work up among the other members of Les Six. Durey, who was not in Paris at the time, chose not to participate. The première was the occasion of a public scandal rivalling that of Le sacre du printemps in 1913. In spite of this, Les mariés de la tour Eiffel was in the repertoire of the Ballets suédois throughout the 1920s.

  1. Overture (14 July) – Auric
  2. Marche nuptialeMilhaud
  3. Discours du General (Polka) – Poulenc
  4. La Baigneuse de TrouvillePoulenc
  5. La Fugue du MassacreMilhaud
  6. La Valse des DepechesTailleferre
  7. Marche funèbreHonegger
  8. QuadrilleTailleferre
  9. RitournellesAuric
  10. Sortie de la NoceMilhaud

1927: L'éventail de Jeanne

In 1927, Auric, Milhaud and Poulenc, along with seven other composers who were not part of Les Six, jointly composed the children's ballet L'éventail de Jeanne.

  1. FanfareMaurice Ravel
  2. MarchePierre-Octave Ferroud
  3. ValseJacques Ibert
  4. CanarieAlexis Roland-Manuel
  5. BourréeMarcel Delannoy
  6. SarabandeAlbert Roussel
  7. PolkaMilhaud
  8. PastourellePoulenc
  9. RondeauAuric
  10. Finale: Kermesse-ValseFlorent Schmitt

1949: Mouvements du coeur

In 1949, Auric, Milhaud and Poulenc, along with three other composers, jointly wrote Mouvements du coeur: Un hommage à la mémoire de Frédéric Chopin, 1849–1949, a suite of songs for baritone or bass and piano on words of Louise Lévêque de Vilmorin in commemoration of the centenary of the death of Frédéric Chopin.

The other composers who contributed to the suite were Jean Françaix, Léo Preger and Henri Sauguet.

  1. PréludeHenri Sauguet
  2. MazurkaPoulenc
  3. ValseAuric
  4. Scherzo impromptuJean Françaix
  5. Étude – Léo Preger
  6. Ballade nocturneMilhaud
  7. Postlude: PolonaiseHenri Sauguet

1952: La guirlande de Campra

In 1952, Auric, Honegger, Poulenc, Tailleferre and three other composers collaborated on an orchestral work called La guirlande de Campra.[3]

  1. ToccataHonegger
  2. Sarabande et farandoleJean-Yves Daniel-Lesur
  3. CanarieAlexis Roland-Manuel
  4. SarabandeTailleferre
  5. Matelote provençalePoulenc
  6. VariationHenri Sauguet
  7. ÉcossaiseAuric

1956: Variations sur le nom de Marguerite Long

In 1956, Auric, Milhaud, Poulenc and five other composers created an orchestral suite in honour of the pianist Marguerite Long, called Variations sur le nom de Marguerite Long

  1. Hymne solennel - Jean Françaix
  2. Variations en forme de Berceuse pour Marguerite Long - Henri Sauguet
  3. La Couronne de Marguerites ("The Crown of Daisies"), Valse en forme de rondo - Milhaud
  4. Nocturne - Jean Rivier
  5. Sérénades - Henri Dutilleux
  6. Intermezzo - Jean-Yves Daniel-Lesur
  7. Bucolique, FP. 160[4] - Poulenc
  8. ML (Allegro: Finale) - Auric

Selected music by individual members of Les Six

See also

References

  1. Bialek, Mireille. "Jacques-Émile Blanche et le Groupe des Six". La Gazette: Des Amis des Musees De Rouen et du Havre. No. 15, Decembre 2012. p. 7.
  2. Roger Stéphane, "Portrait souvenir de Jean Cocteau" (transcript of a French television interview in 1963 by the author and the subject), pp. 63–67 Tallandier 1964 ISBN 2-235-01889-0
  3. Cocteau, Satie & Les Six
  4. Carl B. Schmidt, The Music of Francis Poulenc (1899-1963): A Catalogue. Retrieved 17 May 2016

Sources

Further reading

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/21/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.