Ainsi parla Zarathoustra is an incidental music composed by Pierre Boulez in October 1974 for the theatre Renaud-Barrault. Boulez scored the work for a solo voice and an instrumental ensemble. It was first performed at the Thรฉรขtre d'Orsay in Paris on 6 November 1974. Sketches and scores are kept by the Foundation Paul Sacher in Basel, while images and films of the production are in the Bibliothรจque nationale de France.
| Ainsi parla Zarathoustra | |
|---|---|
| Incidental music by Pierre Boulez | |
The composer in 1968 | |
| English | Thus Spoke Zarathustra |
| Composed | 1974 |
| Performed | 6ย Novemberย 1974: Thรฉรขtre d'Orsay, Paris |
| Scoring | voice and ensemble |
Background and history
editJean-Louis Barrault, the director of the theatre company, created a scenic version of Nietzsche's Also sprach Zarathustra and requested music from Boulez with whom he had collaborated for years. Boulez was from 1945 to 1955 musical director of the company, arranging and conducting incidental music and writing some himself. In 1954/55 Boulez had composed incidental music for the Oresteia in three parts, directed by Barrault. For Ainsi parla Zarathoustra, Barrault wrote detailed instructions for the music, which Boulez considered and often followed. While the French text based on Nietzsche's work by Georges-Arthur Goldschmidt was printed in 1972, a version with Barrault's additional instructions was published by Gallimard in the series Le Manteau d'Arlequin in 1975.[1]
The production was first performed at the Thรฉรขtre d'Orsay in Paris on 6 November 1974.[2] The music remains unpublished; sketches and scores are extant in the collection Pierre Boulez of the Foundation Paul Sacher in Basel, while images and films of the production are held in part by the Bibliothรจque nationale de France.[1]
Music
editNietzsche's text has inspired several composers. Gustav Mahler based the slow movement of his Third Symphony on the "Lied der Nacht" (Song of the night). Richard Strauss composed the symphonic poem Also sprach Zarathustra. Wolfgang Rihm's Third Symphony drew on Nietzsche's text for inspiration as well.[1]
Boulez was especially interested in the episode "L'รฉternel retour" for which he composed music which has been described as at the same time static and moving forward ("in sich stehende und doch weiter schwingende Musik"). On a foundation of static sounds, little ornaments in flutes and oboes arise, coloured by similar motifs in harp and piano. Taking "retour" (return) literally, the music is heard already before Part 3, which has the scene for which Barrault requested it, and several more times throughout Part 3, almost as a leitmotiv. Other sections (Satzzonen), marked by letters and numbers, can also be repeated flexibly.[1]
References
edit- ^ a b c d Zenck, Martin (2004). "Die unverรถffentlichte Bรผhnenmusik von Pierre Boulez zu Nietzsches/Barraults philosophischer Prosa-Dichtung "Ainsi parlait Zarathoustra" (1974)". Die Musikforschung (in German). 57 (3). Wรผrzburg: University of Wรผrzburg: 234โ248. JSTORย 41125509.
- ^ Steinegger, Catherine (5 March 2005). "Apport et influences du thรฉรขtre sur le parcours boulรฉzien" (in French). entretemps.asso.fr. Retrieved 8 January 2016.
Further reading
edit- Zenck, Martin (14 August 2014). Pierre Boulez und das Musiktheater des 20. Jahrhunderts. Studien zur Avantgarde (in German). Wรผrzburg: University of Wรผrzburg. ISBNย 978-0-674-66740-2.
External links
edit- "Pierre Boulez: Ainsi parla Zarathoustra (1974)" (work details) (in French and English). IRCAM.








