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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Music: History, Composers, And Performers, Biographies > Claude Achille Debussy
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Claude Achille Debussy, Music: History, Composers, And Performers, Biographies

Related Category: Music: History, Composers, And Performers, Biographies

Claude Achille Debussy[klOd AshEl´ dubUsE´] Pronunciation Key, 1862–1918, French composer, exponent of musical impressionism. He studied for 11 years at the Paris Conservatory, receiving its Grand Prix de Rome in 1884 for his cantata L'Enfant Prodigue. After traveling in Europe and Russia, Debussy settled down in Paris in 1887 and devoted himself to composing for the rest of his life. In his music he developed a new fluidity of form and explored unusual harmonic relationships and dissonances. By making use of the whole-tone scale, instead of the traditional scale of Western music, he achieved new nuances of mood and expression, as in his famous tone poem PrElude A l'aprEs-midi d'un faune (Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun, 1894). Inspired by a pastoral poem of MallarmE, it is one of Debussy's most sensuous and evocative orchestral works, lending itself perfectly to ballet. Other outstanding orchestral pieces are his Nocturnes (1899) and La Mer (The Sea, 1905). His piano works exploit to the utmost the subtle coloristic possibilities of the instrument. Among them are Suite bergamasque (pub. 1905), containing the popular Clair de lune; Estampes (1903); The Children's Corner (1908); 24 preludes, including La CathEdrale engloutie (1910); and 12 Etudes. He also wrote many exquisite songs and an opera, PellEas et MElisande (1892–1902), based on the drama by Maeterlinck.

See reminiscences of Marguerite Long (tr. 1972); The Poetic Debussy: A Collection of His Song Texts and Selected Letters (ed. by M. G. Cobb, 1982); biographies by V. I. Seroff (1956) and E. Lockspeiser (2 vol., 1962–65, rev. ed. 1980).



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Topics that might be of interest to you:

atonality
cymbals
impressionism, in music
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opera

Related Categories:

Literature and the Arts > Performing Arts
Literature and the Arts > Biographies
People > Literature and the Arts
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