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Divertissement (Ibert)

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Jacques Ibert's Divertissement is a six-movement suite for chamber orchestra adapted by the composer in 1930 from incidental music he had written for a production of Eugène Labiche's stage comedy The Italian Straw Hat in 1929. It is among Ibert's best-known works and has been recorded many times.

Background and premiere

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In the decade after the First World War, Jacques Ibert established himself as a leading French composer, winning France's top musical prize, the Prix de Rome and becoming known to a large public for compositions such as La Ballade de la geôle de Reading (a symphonic poem based on Oscar Wilde's The Ballad of Reading Gaol) and Escales (Ports of Call, an orchestral representation of a Mediterranean sea voyage).[1] In 1929 he composed incidental music for a revival of Eugène Labiche's 1851 stage comedy Un Chapeau de paille d'Italie (The Italian Straw Hat) at the Théatre d'Amsterdam.[2] The following year he arranged the score into a six-movement divertissement for small orchestra. The premiere was given at the Salle Pleyel by the Orchestre symphonique de Paris on 30 November 1930, conducted by Vladimir Golschmann.[3]

The music critic of Le Figaro wrote after the premiere:

This little entertainment … may be only a pochade,[n 1] but composed with what talent, with what naturalness! ... All [the six movements] are equally full of wit, parody and rhythmic invention combined for our pleasure with the talent of an infallible juggler of timbres, using only a few instruments, but combining them with a truly dazzling fantasy. Unexpected encounters, hilarious quotations, allusions that make people laugh, pepper this little work. richer in musical pleasure than many more ambitious scores.[3]

Score

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The suite is scored for piccolo, flute, clarinet, bassoon, French horn, trumpet, trombone, timpani, snare drum, wood block, cymbals, bass drum, tambourine, tam-tam, whistle, celeste, piano and strings. The home key of all six movements is C major.

I Introduction Allegro vivo quarter note = 92
II Cortège Moderato molto quarter note = 69 – Animato subito quarter note = 126 – Allegro moderato quarter note = 112 – Animato subito quarter note = 126
III Nocturne Lento quarter note = 63
IV Valse Animato assai quarter note = 96 – Tempo di Valze dotted quarter note. = 60 – Poco più animato dotted quarter note. = 72– Vivo molto quarter note = 144
V Parade Tempo di marcia quarter note = 120
VI Finale Quasi cadenza quarter note = 100–112 – Vivo (Tempo di galop) quarter note = 168

Style

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Ibert was a friend of two of the members of Les sixDarius Milhaud and Arthur Honegger, but his music generally had little in common with theirs or that of their fellow group members.[1] The musical scholar Roger Nichols writes that in Divertissement, Ibert comes closer than usual to their style:[5]

The "Introduction" gives some of the flavour of the whole: jaunty melodic tags, brilliant orchestration, rhythms that tease and entertain. But in "Cortège" and "Nocturne" we also find touches of the poetic Ibert, albeit, in "Cortège", with interruptions, including some from a well-known wedding march.[n 2] The "Valse" perhaps looks back to the "noble and sentimental" examples by his friend Ravel, though with splendidly vulgar brass additions, while in "Parade" the vulgarity extends to the tunes. In the "Finale", after an attempt to destroy the piano, a whistle reminds us that Labiche's crazy play ends up in a police station.[5]

The composer Michael Ippolito comments that in between the frivolity Ibert offers "a delicately crafted Nocturne that seduces us with atmosphere and sonority, showing an incredible ear for orchestral colour, especially considering the small ensemble".[6]

Recordings

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According to the conductor Richard Auldon Clark, Divertissement is "undoubtedly Ibert's best-known composition",[7] and it has received many recordings.

Orchestra Conductor Year
Winterthur Henry Swoboda 1950
Paris Conservatoire Roger Désormière 1951
Hallé Sir John Barbirolli 1954
Concert Arts Felix Slatkin 1954
Boston Pops Arthur Fiedler 1957
Paris Conservatoire Jean Martinon 1960
MGM Carlos Surinach 1960
Philadelphia Eugene Ormandy 1963
City of Birmingham Symphony Louis Frémaux 1974
CBC Radio Mario Bernardi 1982
Academy of St Martin in the Fields Neville Marriner 1982
Montreal Symphony Charles Dutoit 1989
Ulster Yan Pascal Tortelier 1992
Cincinnati Pops Erich Kunzel 1992
Tapiola Sinfonietta Paavo Järvi 1993
Dallas Symphony Eduardo Mata 1994
Manhattan Chamber Richard Auldon Clark 1996
Lamoureux Yutaka Sado 2000
London Chamber Christopher Warren-Green 2011
Svizzera Italiana Howard Griffiths 2013
Suisse Romande Neeme Järvi 2016
Source: WorldCat and Naxos Music Library

Notes, references and sources

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Notes

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  1. ^ The Dictionnaire de l'Académie Française defines a pochade in this sense as "a literary or musical work quickly composed, lively and full of fantasy, which retains the character of a sketch".[4]
  2. ^ The wedding march in question is Mendelssohn's from his incidental music for A Midsummer Night's Dream.[6]

References

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  1. ^ a b Laederich, Alexandra, "Ibert, Jacques." Grove Music Online, Oxford University Press, 2010 (subscription required)
  2. ^ Michel, p. 53
  3. ^ a b Brussel, Robert. "Les Concerts", Le Figaro, 1 December 1930, pp. 2–3
  4. ^ "pochade", Dictionnaire de l'Académie Française. Retrieved 2 November 2024
  5. ^ a b Nichols, p. 7
  6. ^ a b Ippolito, pp. 4–5
  7. ^ Clark, p. 2

Sources

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  • Clark, Richard Auldon (1996). Jacques Ibert: Oeuvres variées. Providence: Newport Classic. OCLC 1406916546.
  • Ippolito, Michael (2021). Divertissement. Åkersberga: BIS. OCLC 1263176588.
  • Michel, Gérard (1967). Jacques Ibert (in French). Paris: Seghers. OCLC 988850.\
  • Nichols, Roger (2016). Ibert: Orchestral Works. Colchester: Chandos. OCLC 968245785.