FINALE to the Ballet Music from FAUST- Parts & Score, LIGHT CONCERT MUSIC
Availability Available Published 7th February 2018
Cat No.JM102601 Price
£30.00 Composer: Charles Gounod Arranger: Philip Littlemore Category: LIGHT CONCERT MUSIC
Charles Gounod was given to extended bouts of professional lethargy, particularly when personal matters weighed heavily on his mind. So it was in 1869, when he struggled to meet the demands for the Paris revival of his opera Faust, written had been written some 10 years earlier. His original opera had met with both favourable reviews, including one from Berlioz, and a few harsh ones too—including a noteable one from Wagner. Despite some other early negative reviews, the opera grew in stature culminating in its Paris revival. As with French operatic tradition, a 15-minute ballet was inserted into Act V. However, the ballet music was almost not written—not by Gounod at least—as he was reluctant to put pen to paper. He asked the young Camille Saint-Saëns to pen something instead. Saint-Saëns agreed on the understanding that should Gounod write something suitable, he would replace it if he wished. According to Saint-Saëns he heard nothing more of it and never wrote a note! The ballet music appears in the Walpurgis Night revelries where legendary and heroic characters dance to music that is curiously uplifting and buoyant until the finale, also known as Phyné’s Dance, where ominous sounds of wild and wicked celebrations from the underworld can be heard. This arrangement of the finale is a fitting piece for either a concert finisher or an encore.