Erik Satie: Difference between revisions
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{{short description|French composer and pianist}} |
{{short description|French composer and pianist (1866–1925)}} |
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{{Use British English|date=May 2011}} |
{{Use British English|date=May 2011}} |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2020}} |
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[[File:Ericsatie.jpg|thumb|right| |
[[File:Ericsatie.jpg|thumb|right|Satie in 1920 by [[Henri Manuel]]|alt=Elderly white man, balding, with neat moustache and beard, in formal daywear with wing collar and dark necktie. He is wearing pince-nez glasses]] |
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'''Éric Alfred Leslie Satie''' ({{IPAc-en|UK|ˈ|s|æ|t|i|,_|ˈ|s|ɑː|t|i}}, {{IPAc-en|US|s|æ|ˈ|t|iː|,_|s|ɑː|ˈ|t|iː}},<ref>{{cite LPD|3}}</ref><ref>{{cite EPD|18}}</ref> {{IPA-fr|eʁik sati|lang}}; 17 May 1866{{spaced ndash}}1 July 1925), who signed his name '''Erik Satie''' after 1884, was a French composer and pianist. Satie was an influential artist in the late 19th- and early 20th-century Parisian [[avant-garde]]. His work was a precursor to later artistic movements such as [[minimalism]], [[repetitive music]], and the [[Theatre of the Absurd]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.gresham.ac.uk/lectures-and-events/erik-satie-his-music-the-vision-his-legacy|title=Lectures and events|work=gresham.ac.uk|url-status=dead|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20130102053914/http://www.gresham.ac.uk/lectures-and-events/erik-satie-his-music-the-vision-his-legacy|archivedate=2 January 2013|df=dmy-all}}</ref> |
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'''Eric Alfred Leslie Satie'''{{refn|{{IPAc-en|UK|ˈ|s|æ|t|i|,_|ˈ|s|ɑː|t|i}}, {{IPAc-en|US|s|æ|ˈ|t|iː|,_|s|ɑː|ˈ|t|iː}};<ref>{{cite LPD|3}}</ref><ref>{{cite EPD|18}}</ref> {{IPA|fr|eʁik sati|lang}}|group=n}} (17 May 1866{{spaced ndash}}1 July 1925), who signed his name '''Erik Satie''' after 1884, was a French composer and pianist. He was the son of a French father and a British mother. He studied at the [[Conservatoire de Paris|Paris Conservatoire]], but was an undistinguished student and obtained no diploma. In the 1880s he worked as a pianist in café-cabaret in [[Montmartre]], Paris, and began composing works, mostly for solo piano, such as his ''[[Gymnopédies]]'' and ''[[Gnossiennes]]''. He also wrote music for a [[Rosicrucian]] sect to which he was briefly attached. |
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An eccentric, Satie was introduced as a "gymnopedist" in 1887, shortly before writing his most famous compositions, the ''[[Gymnopédies]]''. Later, he also referred to himself as a "phonometrician" (meaning "someone who measures sounds"), preferring this designation to that of "musician",<ref>Christopher Innes, Maria Shevtsova, ''The Cambridge Introduction to Theatre Directing'' (Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 2013), p. 151.</ref> after having been called "a clumsy but subtle technician" in a book on contemporary French composers published in 1911.<ref>"{{Lang|fr|Je suis phonomètre avant d’être musicien" [http://www.eilpianova.fr/les-spectacles/apercus-phonometriques Aperçus phonométriques & autres sous-entendus]}} {{cite web |url=http://www.eilpianova.fr/les-spectacles/apercus-phonometriques |title=Archived copy |accessdate=2009-06-16 |url-status=bot: unknown |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20130918092808/http://www.eilpianova.fr/les-spectacles/apercus-phonometriques |archivedate=18 September 2013 |df=dmy-all }}</ref> |
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After a spell in which he composed little, Satie entered Paris's second music academy, the [[Schola Cantorum de Paris|Schola Cantorum]], as a mature student. His studies there were more successful than those at the Conservatoire. From about 1910 he became the focus of successive groups of young composers attracted by his unconventionality and originality. Among them were the group known as [[Les Six]]. A meeting with [[Jean Cocteau]] in 1915 led to the creation of the ballet ''[[Parade (ballet)|Parade]]'' (1917) for [[Serge Diaghilev]], with music by Satie, sets and costumes by [[Pablo Picasso]], and choreography by [[Léonide Massine]]. |
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In addition to his body of music, Satie was "a thinker with a gift of eloquence"<ref>[[Harriet Monroe|Monroe, Harriet]], ''A Poet's Life'' (visit to Paris 1923), Macmillan, New York, 1938</ref> who left a remarkable set of writings, having contributed work for a range of publications, from the [[dada]]ist ''[[391 (magazine)|391]]''<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.artic.edu/reynolds/essays/hofmann2.php|title=Documents of Dada and Surrealism: Dada and Surrealist Journals in the Mary Reynolds Collection|website=Artic.edu|accessdate=1 August 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150212081937/http://www.artic.edu/reynolds/essays/hofmann2.php#|archive-date=12 February 2015|url-status=dead|df=dmy-all}}</ref> to the American culture chronicle ''[[Vanity Fair (American magazine 1913–36)|Vanity Fair]]''.<ref>Robert Orledge, ''Satie the Composer'' (Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 1990): p. xxxviii.</ref> Although in later life he prided himself on publishing his work under his own name, in the late 19th century he appears to have used pseudonyms such as '''Virginie Lebeau'''<ref>Steven Moore Whiting, ''Satie the Bohemian: From Cabaret to Concert Hall'' (Oxford: Clarendon Press; New York: Oxford University Press, 1999): p. 105.</ref> and '''François de Paule'''<ref>Vincent Lajoinie, Erik Satie, ''L'Age d'Homme'' ({{Full citation needed|date=October 2017}}<!--Place, publisher, and ISBN needed.-->1985). 443 S. 8° 1985 p.31</ref> in some of his published writings. |
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Satie's example guided a new generation of French composers away from post-[[Richard Wagner|Wagnerian]] [[Impressionism in music|impressionism]] towards a sparer, terser style. Among those influenced by him during his lifetime were [[Maurice Ravel]], [[Claude Debussy]], and [[Francis Poulenc]], and he is seen as an influence on more recent composers such as [[John Cage]] and [[John Adams (composer)|John Adams]]. His harmony is often characterised by unresolved chords, he sometimes dispensed with [[Bar (music)|bar-lines]], as in his ''[[Gnossiennes]]'', and his melodies are generally simple and often reflect his love of old church music. He gave some of his later works absurd titles, such as ''[[Veritables Preludes flasques (pour un chien)]]'' ("True Flabby Preludes (for a Dog)", 1912), ''[[Croquis et agaceries d'un gros bonhomme en bois]]'' ("Sketches and Exasperations of a Big Wooden Man", 1913) and ''[[Sonatine bureaucratique]]'' ("Bureaucratic Sonatina", 1917). Most of his works are brief, and the majority are for solo piano. Exceptions include his "symphonic drama" ''[[Socrate]]'' (1919) and two late ballets ''[[Mercure (ballet)|Mercure]]'' and ''[[Relâche (ballet)|Relâche]]'' (1924). |
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==Life== |
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Satie never married, and his home for most of his adult life was a single small room, first in Montmartre and, from 1898 to his death, in [[Arcueil]], a suburb of Paris. He adopted various images over the years, including a period in quasi-priestly dress, another in which he always wore identically coloured velvet suits, and is known for his last persona, in neat bourgeois costume, with [[bowler hat]], wing collar, and umbrella. He was a lifelong heavy drinker, and died of [[cirrhosis]] of the liver at the age of 59. |
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===Early life=== |
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[[File:MaisonSatie.jpg|thumb|Satie house and museum in [[Honfleur]], Normandy]] |
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Erik Satie was born on 17 May 1866, the son of Alfred Satie and his wife Jane Leslie (née Anton), who was born in London to Scottish parents. Erik was born at [[Honfleur]] in Normandy; his childhood home there is now open to the public.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.musees-honfleur.fr/maison-satie.html|title=Maisons Satie|website=Musees-honfleur.fr|accessdate=1 August 2017}}</ref> When Satie was four years old, his family moved to Paris, his father having been offered a translator's job in the capital. After his mother's death in 1872, he was sent (at age 6), together with his younger brother, Conrad, back to Honfleur to live with his paternal grandparents. There he received his first music lessons from a local [[organist]]. In 1878, when he was 12 years old, his grandmother died, and the two brothers were reunited in Paris with their father, who remarried (to a piano teacher) shortly afterwards. From the early 1880s onwards, Satie started publishing salon compositions by his step-mother and himself, among others.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.naxos.com/mainsite/blurbs_reviews.asp?item_code=8.550305&catNum=550305&filetype=About+this+Recording&language=English|title=SATIE, E.: Piano Works (Selection) (Körmendi)|website=Naxos.com|accessdate=1 August 2017}}</ref> |
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==Life and career== |
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In 1879, Satie entered the [[Conservatoire de Paris|Paris Conservatoire]], where he was soon labelled untalented by his teachers. [[Georges Mathias]], his professor of piano at the Conservatoire, described his pupil's piano technique in flatly negative terms, "insignificant and laborious" and "worthless".<ref>{{cite web|last=Orledge |first=Robert |title=Satie, Erik |url=http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com.library.unl.edu/subscriber/article/grove/music/40105 |work=Grove Music Online |publisher=Oxford Music Online |accessdate=24 April 2012 }}{{dead link|date=December 2016 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> [[Émile Decombes]] called him "the laziest student in the Conservatoire".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sospeso.com/contents/composers_artists/satie.htm|title=The Ensemble Sospeso New York|website=Sospeso.com|accessdate=1 August 2017|url-status=dead|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110611170019/http://www.sospeso.com/contents/composers_artists/satie.htm|archivedate=11 June 2011|df=dmy-all}}</ref> Years later, Satie related that Mathias, with great insistence, had told him that his real talent lay in composing. After being sent home for two and a half years, he was readmitted to the Conservatoire at the end of 1885 (age 19), but was unable to make a more favourable impression on his teachers than he had before, and, as a result, resolved to take up [[military service]] a year later. However, Satie's military career did not last very long; within a few months he was discharged after deliberately infecting himself with bronchitis.<ref>in: Mary E. Davis: |
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''Erik Satie''. |
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[https://books.google.com/books?id=1GjATpLsFuYC&lpg=PA25&ots=OzlOGxEZo1&dq=satie%20regiment%20drastic%20steps&pg=PA25#v=onepage&q=satie%20regiment%20drastic%20steps&f=false Reaktion Books – Critical Lives]. (Published{{Full citation needed|date=October 2017}}<!--Place and publisher needed.-->, 2007): p. 25. {{ISBN|978-1-86189-321-5}}.</ref> |
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===Early years=== |
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[[File:MaisonSatie.jpg|thumb|upright=0.75|Satie's birthplace and childhood home, now a museum in [[Honfleur]], Normandy]] |
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Satie was born on 17 May 1866 in [[Honfleur]], Normandy, the first child of Alfred Satie and his wife Jane Leslie (''née'' Anton). Jane Satie was an English Protestant of Scottish descent; Alfred Satie, a [[Shipping agency|shipping broker]], was a Roman Catholic anglophobe.<ref name=r11>Rey, p. 11: "Erik Alfred Leslie Satie est né le 17 mai 1866 à Honfleur (Normandie) d'une mère anglaise et protestante, d'un père catholique et anglophobe, courtier maritime"</ref> A year later, the Saties had a daughter, Olga, and in 1869 a second son, Conrad. The children were baptised in the Anglican church.<ref name=r11/> |
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After the [[Franco-Prussian War]] Alfred Satie sold his business and the family moved to Paris, where he eventually set up as a music publisher.<ref name=gxix/> In 1872 Jane Satie died and Eric and his brother were sent back to Honfleur to be brought up by Alfred's parents. The boys were rebaptised as Roman Catholics and educated at a local boarding school, where Satie excelled in history and Latin but nothing else.<ref>Gillmor, p. 8</ref> In 1874 he began taking music lessons with a local organist, Gustave Vinot, a former pupil of [[Louis Niedermeyer]]. Vinot stimulated Satie's love of old church music, and in particular [[Gregorian chant]].<ref>Gillmor, p. 9</ref> |
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Satie moved from his father's residence to lodgings in [[Montmartre]] in 1887, when he became 21.<ref>Caroline Potter, ''Erik Satie: A Parisian Composer and His World'' ({{Full citation needed|date=October 2017}}<!--place of pub, ISBN needed.-->Boydell & Brewer, 2016): p. 1.</ref> By this time he had started what was to be an enduring friendship with the romantic poet [[José Maria Vicente Ferrer Francisco de Paola Patricio Manuel Contamine|Patrice Contamine]],<ref>Mary E. Davis, ''Erik Satie'' ({{Full citation needed|date=October 2017}}<!--Place of publication needed.-->: Reaktion Books, 2007): p. 21.</ref> and had his first compositions published by his father. He soon integrated with the artistic clientele of the [[Le Chat Noir]] Café-cabaret, and started publishing his ''[[Gymnopédies]]''.<ref>Mary E. Davis, ''Erik Satie'' ({{Full citation needed|date=October 2017}}<!--Place of publication needed.-->: Reaktion Books, 2007): p. 31.</ref> Publication of compositions in the same vein (''{{Lang|fr|[[Ogives]]}}'', ''{{Lang|fr|[[Gnossiennes]]}}'', etc.) followed. In the same period he befriended [[Claude Debussy]]. He moved to a smaller room, still in Montmartre ({{Lang|fr|rue Cortot Nº 6}}, now [[Musée-Placard d'Erik Satie|a museum]]), in 1890.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p01chr9b/p01chxtr|title=Satie's former address, 6 rue Cortot - Alistair McGowan recording The Unsent Letters of Erik Satie on location in Paris - The Unsent Letters of Erik Satie - BBC Radio 4|website=BBC|accessdate=1 August 2017}}</ref> By 1891 he was the official composer and chapel-master of the [[Rosicrucian Order]] "{{Lang|fr|Ordre de la Rose-Croix Catholique, du Temple et du Graal}}", led by {{Lang|fr|Sâr [[Joséphin Péladan]]}}, which led to compositions such as ''{{Lang|fr|Salut drapeau!}}'', ''[[Le Fils des étoiles]]'', and the ''{{Lang|fr|[[Sonneries de la Rose Croix|Sonneries de la Rose+Croix]]}}''. Satie gave performances at the [[Salon de la Rose + Croix]], organized by Péladan.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.rose-croix.org/erik-satie-maitre-de-chapelle-des-rose-croix/|title=Érik Satie, musique des Rose-Croix - Rose-Croix.org|website=Rose-croix.org|accessdate=1 August 2017}}</ref> |
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In 1878 Satie's grandmother died,{{refn|Her death was mysterious: she was found drowned on the beach at Honfleur in unexplained circumstances.<ref name=r11/>|group=n}} and the two boys returned to Paris to be informally educated by their father. Satie did not attend a school, but his father took him to lectures at the {{lang|fr|[[Collège de France]]|italic=no}} and engaged a tutor to teach Eric Latin and Greek. Before the boys returned to Paris from Honfleur, Alfred had met a piano teacher and salon composer, Eugénie Barnetche, whom he married in January 1879, to the dismay of the twelve-year-old Satie, who did not like her.<ref name=oxix>Orledge, p. xix</ref> |
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[[File:Satie.jpg|thumb|left|upright|Caricature of Eric Satie by [[Santiago Rusiñol]], 1891]] |
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Eugénie Satie resolved that her elder stepson should become a professional musician, and in November 1879 enrolled him in the preparatory piano class at the [[Paris Conservatoire]].<ref name=grove/> Satie strongly disliked the Conservatoire, which he described as "a vast, very uncomfortable, and rather ugly building; a sort of district prison with no beauty on the inside – nor on the outside, for that matter".{{refn|"un vaste bâtiment très inconfortable et assez vilain à voir – une sorte de local pénitencier sans aucun agrément extérieur – ni intérieur du reste".<ref>Satie, p. 67</ref>|group=n}} He studied [[solfeggio]] with [[Albert Lavignac]] and piano with [[Émile Decombes]], who had been a pupil of [[Frédéric Chopin]].<ref>Cooper, Martin, and Charles Timbrell. [https://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/grovemusic/view/10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.001.0001/omo-9781561592630-e-0000006587 "Cortot, Alfred"], ''Grove Music Online'', Oxford University Press, 2001. Retrieved 20 September 2021 {{subscription required}} {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220401074810/https://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/grovemusic/view/10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.001.0001/omo-9781561592630-e-0000006587 |date=1 April 2022}}</ref> In 1880 Satie took his first examinations as a pianist: he was described as "gifted but indolent". The following year Decombes called him "the laziest student in the Conservatoire".<ref name=grove>Orledge, Robert, revised by Caroline Potter. [https://doi.org/10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.40105 Satie, Erik (Eric) (Alfred Leslie)"] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210918001425/https://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/grovemusic/view/10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.001.0001/omo-9781561592630-e-0000040105 |date=18 September 2021}}, ''Grove Music Online'', Oxford University Press, 2020. Retrieved 16 September 2021</ref> In 1882 he was expelled from the Conservatoire for his unsatisfactory performance.<ref name=gxix>Gillmor, p. xix</ref> |
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By mid-1892, Satie had composed the first pieces in a compositional system of his own making (''{{Lang|fr|Fête donnée par des Chevaliers Normands en l'honneur d'une jeune demoiselle}}''), provided incidental music to a [[chivalric]] [[esoteric]] play (two ''{{Lang|fr|Prélude du Nazaréen}}''), had his first [[hoax]] published (announcing the [[premiere]] of ''{{Lang|fr|Le bâtard de Tristan}}'', an anti-Wagnerian opera he probably never composed),<ref>Steven Moore Whiting, ''Satie the Bohemian: From Cabaret to Concert Hall'' (Oxford: Clarendon Press; New York: Oxford University Press, 1999): p. 151.</ref> and broken from Péladan, starting that autumn with the ''Uspud'' project, a "Christian Ballet", in collaboration with {{Lang|fr|Contamine de Latour}}.<ref>Steven Moore Whiting, ''Satie the Bohemian: From Cabaret to Concert Hall'' (Oxford: Clarendon Press; New York: Oxford University Press), 1999): p. 156.</ref> While the comrades from both the {{Lang|fr|Chat Noir}} and {{Lang|fr|Miguel Utrillo's Auberge du Clou}} sympathised, a promotional brochure was produced for the project, which reads as a [[pamphlet]] for a new esoteric [[sect]]. |
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[[File:Erik Satie 1884.jpg|thumb|upright=0.75|alt=young white man with receding medium-length dark hair, in pince-nez|Satie in 1884]] |
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Satie and [[Suzanne Valadon]] (an artists' model, artist, long-time friend of Miguel Utrillo, and mother of [[Maurice Utrillo]]) began an affair early in 1893.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.deslettres.fr/lettre-derik-satie-a-suzanne-valadon-partout-ne-vois-yeux/|title=Lettre d'Erik Satie à Suzanne Valadon : " Partout je ne vois que tes yeux. " - Des Lettres|last=DesLettres|date=20 June 2016|website=Deslettres.fr|accessdate=1 August 2017}}</ref> After their first night together, he proposed marriage. The two did not marry, but Valadon moved to a room next to Satie's at the {{Lang|fr|Rue Cortot}}. Satie became obsessed with her,<ref name="Föreningen2">{{cite web|url=http://www.af.lu.se/~fogwall/article5.html|title=Suzanne Valadon|publisher=Akademiska Föreningen, [[Lund University]]|accessdate=12 June 2010|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20101003121959/http://www.af.lu.se/~fogwall/article5.html|archivedate=3 October 2010}}</ref> calling her his ''{{Lang|fr|Biqui}}'' and writing impassioned notes about "her whole being, lovely eyes, gentle hands, and tiny feet". During their relationship, Satie composed the ''[[Danses gothiques]]'' as a means of calming his mind,<ref>Robert Orledge, ''Satie the Composer'', Cambridge University Press 1990, pp. 11, 157</ref> and Valadon painted a portrait of Satie, which she gave to him. After six months she moved away, leaving Satie broken-hearted. Afterwards, he said that he was left with "nothing but an icy loneliness that fills the head with emptiness and the heart with sadness".<ref name="Föreningen"/> It is believed this was the only intimate relationship Satie ever had.<ref name="grove" /> |
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In 1884 Satie wrote his first known composition, a short Allegro for piano, written while on holiday in Honfleur. He signed himself "Erik" on this and subsequent compositions, though continuing to use "Eric" on other documents until 1906.<ref name=oxx>Orledge, p. xx</ref> In 1885, he was readmitted to the Conservatoire, in the intermediate piano class of his stepmother's former teacher, [[Georges Mathias]]. He made little progress: Mathias described his playing as "Insignificant and laborious" and Satie himself "Worthless. Three months just to learn the piece. Cannot sight-read properly".<ref>Gillmor, p. xx</ref>{{refn|Satie's biographer [[Robert Orledge]] has conjectured that Satie had [[dyslexia]], a condition that can make reading music as difficult as reading words.<ref name=gresham>Orledge, Robert. [https://www.gresham.ac.uk/lectures-and-events/erik-satie-part-one-saties-musical-and-personal-logic-and-satie-as-poet "Erik Satie: His music, the vision, his legacy"] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201125023449/https://www.gresham.ac.uk/lectures-and-events/erik-satie-part-one-saties-musical-and-personal-logic-and-satie-as-poet |date=25 November 2020}}, Gresham College, 2021. Retrieved 17 September 2021</ref><ref>Ganschow, Leonore, Jenafer Lloyd-Jones, and T. R. Miles. [http://www.jstor.org/stable/23769692 "Dyslexia and Musical Notation"], ''Annals of Dyslexia'' 1994, pp. 185–202 {{subscription required}} {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210918051424/https://www.jstor.org/stable/23769692 |date=18 September 2021}}</ref>|group=n}} Satie became fascinated by aspects of religion. He spent much time in [[Notre-Dame de Paris]] contemplating the stained glass windows and in the [[Bibliothèque nationale de France|National Library]] examining obscure medieval manuscripts.<ref>Gillmor, p. 33</ref> His friend [[Alphonse Allais]] later dubbed him "Esotérik Satie".<ref>Harding, p. 35</ref> From this period comes ''[[Ogives]]'', a set of four piano pieces inspired by Gregorian chant and [[Gothic architecture|Gothic church architecture]].<ref>Rey, p. 22; and Gillmor, p. 64</ref> |
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In 1893, Satie met the young [[Maurice Ravel]] for the first time,<ref>Robert Orledge, ''Satie the Composer'', Cambridge University Press 1990, p. 250</ref> Satie's style emerging in the first compositions of the youngster. One of Satie's own compositions of that period, ''[[Vexations]]'', was to remain undisclosed until after his death. By the end of the year he had founded the {{Lang|fr|[[Église Métropolitaine d'Art de Jésus Conducteur]]}} (Metropolitan Art Church of Jesus the Conductor). As its only member, in the role of "Parcier et Maître de Chapelle", he started to compose a ''{{Lang|fr|Grande messe}}'' (later to become known as the ''[[Messe des pauvres]]''), and wrote a flood of letters, articles and pamphlets showing off his self-assuredness in religious and artistic matters. To give an example: he applied for membership in the [[Académie Française]] twice, leaving no doubt in the application letter that the board of that organisation (presided over by [[Camille Saint-Saëns]]) as much as owed him such membership. Such proceedings without doubt rather helped to wreck his popularity in the cultural [[The Establishment|establishment]].<ref>Robert Orledge, Satie the Composer, Cambridge University Press 1990 p.50</ref> In 1895 he inherited some money, allowing him to have more of his writings printed, and to change from wearing a priest-like habit to being the "Velvet Gentleman". |
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Keen to leave the Conservatoire, Satie volunteered for military service, and joined the 33rd Infantry Regiment in November 1886.<ref>Gillmor, p. 12</ref> He quickly found army life no more to his liking than the Conservatoire, and deliberately contracted acute [[bronchitis]] by standing in the open, bare-chested, on a winter night.<ref>Templier, pp. 10–11</ref> After three months' convalescence he was invalided out of the army.<ref name=grove/><ref>Templier, p. 11</ref> |
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===Move to Arcueil=== |
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[[File:El bohemi by Ramon Casas.jpg|thumb|upright|''Satie, Moulin de la Galette'' ("The Bohemian"), [[Ramon Casas]], (1891)]] |
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By mid-1896, all of Satie's financial means had vanished, and he had to move to cheaper and much smaller lodgings, first at the {{Lang|fr|Rue Cortot}},<ref>{{openplaque|3265}}</ref> and two years later, after he had composed the two first sets of ''{{Lang|fr|[[Pièces froides]]}}'' in 1897, to [[Arcueil]], a suburb some five kilometres from the centre of Paris.<ref>Robert Orledge, Satie the Composer, Cambridge University Press 1990 p.6</ref> During this period he re-established contact with his brother Conrad for numerous practical and financial matters, disclosing some of his inner feelings in the process. The letters to Conrad made it clear that he had set aside his religious ideas. |
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===Montmartre=== |
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From 1899 on, Satie started making money as a cabaret pianist, adapting over a hundred compositions of popular music for piano or piano and voice, adding some of his own. The most popular of these were ''{{Lang|fr|[[Je te veux]]}}'', text by Henry Pacory; ''{{Lang|fr|Tendrement}}'', text by Vincent Hyspa; ''{{Lang|fr|Poudre d'or}}'', a waltz; ''[[La Diva de l'Empire]]'', text by Dominique Bonnaud/Numa Blès; ''{{Lang|fr|Le Picadilly}}'', a march; ''{{Lang|fr|Légende californienne}}'', text by Contamine de Latour (lost, but the music later reappears in ''{{Lang|fr|La belle excentrique}}''); and quite a few more, many of which have been lost. In his later years, Satie would reject all his cabaret music as vile and against his nature,<ref>Erik Satie in a 17 January 1911 letter to his brother Conrad, quoted in Volta 1989 and in Gillmor 1992 (Chronology p. xxix)</ref> but for the time being, it was an income. |
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In 1887, at the age of 21, Satie moved from his father's residence to lodgings in the [[9th arrondissement of Paris|9th arrondissement]]. By this time he had started what was to be an enduring friendship with the romantic poet [[José Maria Vicente Ferrer Francisco de Paola Patricio Manuel Contamine|Contamine de Latour]], whose verse he set in some of his early compositions, which Satie senior published.<ref name=grove/> His lodgings were close to the popular {{lang|fr|[[Le Chat Noir|Chat Noir]]|italic=no}} cabaret on the southern edge of [[Montmartre]] where he became an habitué and then a resident pianist. The Chat Noir was known as the "temple de la 'convention farfelue'" – the temple of zany convention,<ref>Rey, p. 14</ref> and as the biographer [[Robert Orledge]] puts it, Satie, "free from his restrictive upbringing … enthusiastically embraced the reckless bohemian lifestyle and created for himself a new persona as a long-haired man-about-town in frock coat and top hat". This was the first of several personas that Satie invented for himself over the years.<ref name=grove/> |
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[[File:Santiago Rusinol Portrait of Eric Satie at the harmonium.jpg|thumb|upright=0.75|left|alt=man in top hat, smoking a cigarette, seated at a musical keyboard|Satie by [[Santiago Rusiñol]], 1890s]] |
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Only a few compositions that Satie took seriously remain from this period: ''[[Jack in the Box (Satie)|Jack in the Box]]'', music to a [[pantomime]] by [[Jules Depaquit]] (called a "{{Lang|fr|clownerie}}" by Satie); ''{{Lang|fr|Geneviève de Brabant}}'', a short comic opera on a serious theme, text by [[Patrice Contamine de Latour|"Lord Cheminot"]]; ''The Dreamy Fish'', piano music to accompany a lost tale by Cheminot;<ref>Steven Moore Whiting, ''Satie the Bohemian: From Cabaret to Concert Hall'', Oxford: Clarendon Press 1999, p.259</ref> and a few others that were mostly incomplete, hardly any of them staged, and none of them published at the time. |
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In the late 1880s Satie styled himself on at least one occasion "Erik Satie – gymnopédiste",<ref>Orledge, p. 6</ref>{{refn|Later he referred to himself at least once as a "phonometrician" (meaning "someone who measures sounds") after being called "a clumsy but subtle technician" in a book about contemporary French composers published in 1911.<ref>Innes and Shevtsova, p. 151</ref>|group=n}} and his works from this period include the three ''[[Gymnopédies]]'' (1888) and the first ''[[Gnossiennes]]'' (1889 and 1890). He earned a modest living as pianist and conductor at the Chat Noir, before falling out with the proprietor and moving to become second pianist at the nearby Auberge du Clou. There he became a close friend of [[Claude Debussy]], who proved a kindred spirit in his experimental approach to composition. Both were [[Bohemianism|bohemians]], enjoying the same café society and struggling to survive financially.<ref>Whiting, p. 172</ref> At the Auberge du Clou Satie first encountered the flamboyant, self-styled "Sâr" [[Joséphin Péladan]], for whose mystic sect, the Ordre de la Rose-Croix Catholique du Temple et du Graal, he was appointed composer.<ref>Rey, p. 33</ref> This gave him scope for experiment, and Péladan's salons at the fashionable Galerie Durand-Ruel gained Satie his first public hearings.<ref name=grove/><ref>Gillmor, pp. 76–77</ref> Frequently short of money, Satie moved from his lodgings in the 9th arrondissement to a small room in the rue Cortot not far from [[Sacré-Cœur, Paris|Sacre-Coeur]],<ref>Rey, p. 17</ref> so high up the Butte Montmartre that he said he could see from his window all the way to the Belgian border.{{refn|"La vu s'étend jusqu'à la frontière belge".<ref>Lajoinie, p. 21</ref>|group=n}} |
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Both ''{{Lang|fr|Geneviève de Brabant}}'' and ''The Dreamy Fish'' have been analysed by Ornella Volta as containing elements of competition with [[Claude Debussy]], of which Debussy was probably not aware, Satie not making this music public. Meanwhile, Debussy was having one of his first major successes with ''{{Lang|fr|[[Pelléas et Mélisande (opera)|Pelléas et Mélisande]]}}'' in 1902, leading a few years later to 'who-was-precursor-to-whom' debates between the two composers, in which Maurice Ravel would also get involved. |
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By mid-1892, Satie had composed the first pieces in a compositional system of his own making (''{{Lang|fr|Fête donnée par des Chevaliers Normands en l'honneur d'une jeune demoiselle}}''), provided incidental music to a [[chivalric]] [[esoteric]] play (two ''{{Lang|fr|Préludes du Nazaréen}}''), had a hoax published (announcing the premiere of his non-existent ''{{Lang|fr|Le bâtard de Tristan}}'', an anti-Wagnerian opera),<ref>Whiting, p. 151</ref> and broken away from Péladan, starting that autumn with the "''Uspud''" project, a "Christian Ballet", in collaboration with Latour.<ref>Whiting, p. 156.</ref> He challenged the musical establishment by proposing himself – unsuccessfully – for the seat in the [[Académie des Beaux-Arts]] made vacant by the death of [[Ernest Guiraud]].<ref name=w152>Whiting, p. 152</ref>{{refn|Satie repeated this gesture twice – on the deaths of [[Charles Gounod]] in 1894 and [[Ambroise Thomas]] in 1896. Professors from the Conservatoire were elected on both occasions.<ref>Pasler, Jann. [https://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/grovemusic/view/10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.001.0001/omo-9781561592630-e-0000008232 "Dubois, (François Clément) Théodore"], ''Grove Music Online'', Oxford University Press. Retrieved 16 September 2021{{subscription required}} {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210524182753/https://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/grovemusic/view/10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.001.0001/omo-9781561592630-e-0000008232 |date=24 May 2021 }}; and Duchen, p. 120</ref>|group=n}} Between 1893 and 1895, Satie, affecting a quasi-priestly dress, was the founder and only member of the [[Metropolitan Church of Art of Jesus the Conductor|Eglise Métropolitaine d'Art de Jésus Conducteur]]. From his "''Abbatiale''" in the rue Cortot, he published scathing attacks on his artistic enemies.<ref name=grove/> |
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In October 1905, Satie enrolled in [[Vincent d'Indy]]'s [[Schola Cantorum de Paris]]<ref>Jane F. Fulcher, ''French Cultural Politics & Music: From the Dreyfus Affair to the First World War'', Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 1999, p. 199.</ref> to study classical [[counterpoint]] while still continuing his cabaret work. Most of his friends were as dumbfounded as the professors at the Schola when they heard about his new plan to return to the classrooms, especially as d'Indy was an admiring pupil of [[Camille Saint-Saëns|Saint-Saëns]], not particularly favoured by Satie. Satie would follow these courses at the Schola, as a respected pupil, for more than five years, receiving a first (intermediate) diploma in 1908. Some of his classroom counterpoint-exercises, such as the ''{{Lang|fr|Désespoir agréable}}'', were published after his death. Another summary, of the period prior to the Schola, also appeared in 1911: the ''[[Trois morceaux en forme de poire]]'', which was a kind of compilation of the best of what he had written up to 1903. |
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[[File:Suzanne-Valadon-1885.jpg|thumb|alt=young white woman with dark hair in extravagant hat|[[Suzanne Valadon]], 1885]] |
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In 1893 Satie had what is believed to be his only love affair, a five-month liaison with the painter [[Suzanne Valadon]]. After their first night together, he proposed marriage. The two did not marry, but Valadon moved to a room next to Satie's at the rue Cortot. Satie became obsessed with her, calling her his Biqui and writing impassioned notes about "her whole being, lovely eyes, gentle hands, and tiny feet".<ref name=r49>Rosinsky, p. 49</ref> During their relationship Satie composed the ''Danses gothiques'' as a means of calming his mind,<ref>Orledge, p. 157</ref> and Valadon painted his portrait, which she gave him. After five months she moved away, leaving him devastated. He said later that he was left with "nothing but an icy loneliness that fills the head with emptiness and the heart with sadness".<ref name=r49/> |
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In 1895 Satie attempted to change his image once again: this time to that of "the Velvet Gentleman". From the proceeds of a small legacy, he bought seven identical [[Dun Cow|dun]]-coloured suits. Orledge comments that this change "marked the end of his Rose+Croix period and the start of a long search for a new artistic direction".<ref name=grove/> |
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Something that becomes clear through these published compilations is that Satie did not so much reject [[Romanticism]] and its exponents like [[Richard Wagner|Wagner]], but that he rejected certain aspects of it. From his first composition to his last, he rejected the idea of [[musical development]],<ref>John Williamson, ''Words and Music'' (Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2005), p. 161.</ref> in the strict definition of this term: the intertwining of different themes in a development section of a [[sonata form]]. As a result, his contrapuntal and other works were very short; the "new, modern" [[Fugue]]s do not extend further than the exposition of the theme(s). Generally, he would say that he did not think it permitted that a composer take more time from his public than strictly necessary.<ref>[https://etd.ohiolink.edu/rws_etd/document/get/osu1299643553/] {{dead link|date=August 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.pianonoise.com/Composer.Satie.htm|title=Satie|website=wianonoise.com|accessdate=1 August 2017}}</ref> Also [[Melodrama]], in its historical meaning of the then popular romantic genre of "spoken words to a background of music", was something Satie avoided. His 1913 ''[[Le piège de Méduse]]'' could be seen as an absurdist spoof of that genre. |
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===Move to Arcueil=== |
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In the meantime, other changes had also taken place: Satie was a member of a radical socialist party (he later switched his membership to the [[French Communist Party|Communist Party]] in that area after December 1920),<ref>{{cite book|title=Satie the Composer|year=1990|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=9780521350372|page=233|author=Robert Orledge|quote=As Satie's career progressed, he moved further and further towards the left. As early as 1908 he was an active member of the Radical-Socialist Committee in Arcueil, and he joined the official Socialist Party on the day after the assassination of [[Jean Jaurès]] (31 July 1914), switching to the Communist Party after the Congress of Tours in December 1920.}}</ref> and had socialised with the Arcueil community: amongst other things, he had been involved in the "{{Lang|fr|Patronage laïque}}" work for children.<ref>Vincent Lajoinie, ''Erik Satie: L'Age d'Homme''{{Full citation needed|date=October 2017}}<!--Place, publisher, ISBN needed.--> (1985) 443 S. 8° p.110</ref> He also changed his appearance to that of the 'bourgeois functionary' with bowler hat, umbrella, etc. He channelled his medieval interests into a peculiar secret [[hobby]]: in a filing cabinet he maintained a collection of imaginary buildings, most of them described as being made out of some kind of metal, which he drew on little cards. Occasionally, extending the game, he would publish anonymous small announcements in local journals, offering some of these buildings, e.g., a "castle in lead", for sale or rent. |
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[[File:2015-Arcueil-Erik-Satie-house.jpg|thumb|upright=0.75|"Les quatre cheminées", [[Arcueil]] – Satie's home from 1898 to his death|alt=angled apartment block at intersection of two streets]] |
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In 1898, in search of somewhere cheaper and quieter than Montmartre, Satie moved to a room in the southern suburbs, in the [[Communes of France|commune]] of [[Arcueil|Arcueil-Cachan]], eight kilometres (five miles) from the centre of Paris.<ref>Giilmor, pp. 112–113</ref><ref>[https://www.viamichelin.co.uk/web/Routes?departure=22%20Rue%20Cauchy%2C%20Arcueil%2C%20France&arrival=Notre%20Dame%20de%20Paris&index=0&vehicle=0&type=0&distance=km¤cy=EUR&highway=false&toll=false&vignette=false&orc=false&crossing=true&caravan=false&shouldUseTraffic=false&withBreaks=false&break_frequency=7200&coffee_duration=1200&lunch_duration=3600&diner_duration=3600&night_duration=32400&car=hatchback&fuel=petrol&fuelCost=1.581&allowance=0&corridor=&departureDate=&arrivalDate=&fuelConsumption=&shouldUseNewEngine=false Journey planner] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210917125017/https://www.viamichelin.co.uk/web/Routes?departure=22%20Rue%20Cauchy,%20Arcueil,%20France&arrival=Notre%20Dame%20de%20Paris&index=0&vehicle=0&type=0&distance=km¤cy=EUR&highway=false&toll=false&vignette=false&orc=false&crossing=true&caravan=false&shouldUseTraffic=false&withBreaks=false&break_frequency=7200&coffee_duration=1200&lunch_duration=3600&diner_duration=3600&night_duration=32400&car=hatchback&fuel=petrol&fuelCost=1.581&allowance=0&corridor=&departureDate=&arrivalDate=&fuelConsumption=&shouldUseNewEngine=false |date=17 September 2021 }}, ViaMichelin. Retrieved 17 September 2021</ref> This remained his home for the rest of his life. No visitors were ever admitted.<ref name=grove/> He joined a radical socialist party (he later switched his membership to the [[French Communist Party|Communist Party]]),<ref>Orledge, p. 233</ref> but adopted a thoroughly bourgeois image: the biographer Pierre-Daniel Templier, writes, "With his umbrella and [[bowler hat]], he resembled a quiet school teacher. Although a Bohemian, he looked very dignified, almost ceremonious".<ref>Templier, p. 56</ref> |
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Satie earned a living as a cabaret pianist, adapting more than a hundred compositions of popular music for piano or piano and voice, adding some of his own. The most popular of these were ''{{Lang|fr|[[Je te veux]]}}'', text by Henry Pacory; ''{{Lang|fr|Tendrement}}'', text by Vincent Hyspa; ''{{Lang|fr|[[Poudre d'or]]}}'', a waltz; ''[[La Diva de l'Empire]]'', text by Dominique Bonnaud/Numa Blès; ''{{Lang|fr|Le Picadilly}}'', a march; ''{{Lang|fr|Légende californienne}}'', text by Contamine de Latour (lost, but the music later reappears in ''{{Lang|fr|[[La belle excentrique]]}}''); and others. In his later years Satie rejected all his cabaret music as vile and against his nature.<ref>Gillmor, p. xxix</ref> Only a few compositions that he took seriously remain from this period: ''[[Jack in the Box (Satie)|Jack in the Box]]'', music to a [[pantomime]] by [[Jules Depaquit]] (called a "{{Lang|fr|clownerie}}" by Satie); ''{{Lang|fr|[[Geneviève de Brabant (Satie)|Geneviève de Brabant]]}}'', a short comic opera to a text by "Lord Cheminot" (Latour); ''{{lang|fr|[[Le poisson rêveur]]}}'' (''The Dreamy Fish''), piano music to accompany a lost tale by Cheminot, and a few others that were mostly incomplete. Few were presented, and none published at the time.<ref>Whiting, p. 259</ref> |
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A rare [[autochrome]] photograph of Satie exists that dates from 1911. It was reproduced on the cover of [[Robert Orledge]]'s second book on the composer, ''Satie Remembered'' (1995),<ref>{{cite book|author=Orledge, Robert|title=Satie Remembered|isbn=9781574670011|publisher=Hal Leonard Corporation|date= August 28, 1995|url=http://www.barnesandnoble.com/enwiki/w/satie-remembered-robert-orledge/1002046202?ean=9781574670011 |
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[[File:C-Debussy-V-d'Indy-A-Roussel-M-Ravel.jpg|thumb|left|Musical friends and teachers: from top left clockwise – [[Claude Debussy|Debussy]], [[Vincent d'Indy|d'Indy]], [[Albert Roussel|Roussel]], [[Maurice Ravel|Ravel]]|alt=head and shoulders photographs of four white men, two neatly bearded, with full heads of hair, the third bald and neatly bearded, the fourth clean shaven with full head of hair]] |
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}}</ref> but where this autochrome was found has not been made known. |
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A decisive change in Satie's musical outlook came after he heard the premiere of Debussy's opera ''[[Pelléas et Mélisande (opera)|Pelléas et Mélisande]]'' in 1902. He found it "absolutely astounding", and he re-evaluated his own music.<ref name=grove/> In a determined attempt to improve his technique, and against Debussy's advice, he enrolled as a mature student at Paris's second main music academy, the [[Schola Cantorum de Paris|Schola Cantorum]] in October 1905, continuing his studies there until 1912.<ref>Rey, p. 61</ref> The institution was run by [[Vincent d'Indy]], who emphasised orthodox technique rather than creative originality.<ref>[https://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780199579037.001.0001/acref-9780199579037-e-5982 "Schola Cantorum"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210516120912/https://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780199579037.001.0001/acref-9780199579037-e-5982 |date=2021-05-16 }}, ''The Oxford Companion to Music'', edited by Alison Latham, Oxford University Press, 2011.</ref> Satie studied [[counterpoint]] with [[Albert Roussel]] and composition with d'Indy, and was a much more conscientious and successful student than he had been at the Conservatoire in his youth.<ref>Orledge, pp. 86 and 95</ref> |
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=== Later life === |
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[[File:Satie autoportret Projet Buste 1913.jpg|thumb|upright|Sketch for a [[bust (sculpture)|bust]] of himself, by Satie, 1913]] |
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Starting in 1912, Satie's new humorous miniatures for piano became very successful, and he wrote and published many of these over the next few years (most of them premiered by the pianist [[Ricardo Viñes]]). His habit of accompanying the scores of his compositions with all kinds of written remarks was now well established, so that a few years later he had to insist that these not be read out during performances<!-- avoiding "Melodrama" genre! -->. He wrote in the first edition of ''Heures séculaires et instantanées'', "To whom it may concern: 'I forbid anyone to read the text aloud during the musical performance. Ignorance of my instructions will incur my righteous indignation against the presumptuous culprit. No exception will be allowed.'"<ref>{{cite book|last=Williamson|first=John|title=Words and music|publisher=Liverpool University Press|location=Liverpool|year=2005|isbn=9780853236191|page=176}}</ref> He had mostly stopped using [[barline]]s by this time. In some ways, these compositions were very reminiscent of [[Gioachino Rossini|Rossini]]'s compositions from the final years of his life,<ref>Robert Orledge, ''Satie the Composer'' (Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 1990): p. 235.</ref> grouped under the name [[Péchés de vieillesse]]. |
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It was not until 1911, when he was in his mid-forties, that Satie came to the notice of the musical public in general. In January of that year [[Maurice Ravel]] played some early Satie works at a concert by the [[Société musicale indépendante]], a forward-looking group set up by Ravel and others as a rival to the conservative [[Société Nationale de Musique|Société nationale de musique]].<ref>Kelly, Barbara L. [http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/grove/music/52145 "Ravel, Maurice"], ''Grove Music Online'', Oxford University Press. Retrieved 17 September 2021 {{subscription required}}</ref>{{refn|The pieces were the second ''[[Sarabandes (Satie)|Sarabande]]'', the first prelude to ''[[Le Fils des étoiles]]'' and the third of the ''Gymnopédies''.<ref>[https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k2890931/f7.item.r=Erik%20Satie.zoom "Courrier Musicale"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210917113043/https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k2890931/f7.item.r=Erik%20Satie.zoom |date=2021-09-17 }}, ''Le Figaro'', 14 January 1911, p. 7; and Gillmor, p. xxiii</ref>|group=n}} Satie was suddenly seen as "the precursor and apostle of the musical revolution now taking place";<ref>Orledge, p. 2</ref> he became a focus for young composers. Debussy, having orchestrated the first and third ''Gymnopédies'', conducted them in concert. The publisher Demets asked for new works from Satie, who was finally able to give up his cabaret work and devote himself to composition. Works such as the cycle ''[[Sports et divertissements]]'' (1914) were published in de luxe editions. The press began to write about Satie's music, and a leading pianist, [[Ricardo Viñes]], took him up, giving celebrated first performances of some Satie pieces.<ref name=grove/> |
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However, the acceleration in Satie's life did not come so much from the success of his new piano pieces; it was Ravel who inadvertently triggered the characteristics of Satie's remaining years and thus influenced the successive progressive artistic and cultural movements that rapidly manifested themselves in Paris over the following years. Paris was seen as the artistic capital of the world, and the beginning of the new century appeared to have set many minds on fire.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://girlsguidetoparis.com/french-culture-vive-la-belle-epoque/|title=French Culture: Vive la Belle Epoque|date=24 April 2014|website=Girlsguidetoparis.com|accessdate=1 August 2017}}</ref> In 1910 the "{{Lang|fr|Jeunes Ravêlites}}", a group of young musicians around Ravel, proclaimed their preference for Satie's earlier work from before the Schola period, reinforcing the idea that Satie had been a precursor of Debussy. |
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[[File:Erik Satie en 1909.PNG|thumb|upright=0.75|alt=Satie wearing a bowler hat and wing collar|Satie's final persona, [[bowler hat|bowler-hatted]] and formally dressed]] |
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===Last years=== |
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At first, Satie was pleased that at least some of his works were receiving public attention, but when he realised that this meant that his more recent work was overlooked or dismissed, he looked for other young artists who related better to his more recent ideas, so as to have better mutual support in creative activity. Thus, young artists such as [[Alexis Roland-Manuel|Roland-Manuel]], and later [[Georges Auric]], and [[Jean Cocteau]], started to receive more of his attention than the "{{Lang|fr|Jeunes}}". |
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Satie became the focus of successive groups of young composers, whom he first encouraged and then distanced himself from, sometimes rancorously, when their popularity threatened to eclipse his or they otherwise displeased him.<ref>Gillmor, p. 259; Potter (2017), p. 233; and Whiting, p. 493</ref> First were the "jeunes" – those associated with Ravel – and then a group known at first as the "nouveaux jeunes", later called [[Les Six]], including [[Georges Auric]], [[Louis Durey]], [[Arthur Honegger]], and [[Germaine Tailleferre]], joined later by [[Francis Poulenc]] and [[Darius Milhaud]].<ref name=grove/> Satie dissociated himself from the second group in 1918, and in the 1920s he became the focal point of another set of young composers including [[Henri Cliquet-Pleyel]], [[Roger Désormière]], [[Maxime Jacob]] and [[Henri Sauguet]], who became known as the "Arcueil School".<ref>Nichols, p. 264</ref> In addition to turning against Ravel, Auric and Poulenc in particular,<ref>Kelly, p. 15 (Ravel); and Schmidt, p. 13 (Auric and Poulenc)</ref> Satie quarrelled with his old friend Debussy in 1917, resentful of the latter's failure to appreciate the more recent Satie compositions.<ref>Lesure, p. 333</ref> The rupture lasted for the remaining months of Debussy's life, and when he died the following year, Satie refused to attend the funeral.<ref>Dietschy, p. 190</ref> A few of his protégés escaped his displeasure, and Milhaud and Désormière were among those who remained friends with him to the last.<ref>Orledge, p. 255</ref> |
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[[File:Deuxième-manager-Parade.png|thumb|left|upright=0.75|''[[Parade (ballet)|Parade]]'', 1917 – music by Satie, décor by [[Pablo Picasso|Picasso]]|alt=stage costume design in absurdist style, with dancer almost invisible under costume representing a deputy manager]] |
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The [[First World War]] restricted concert-giving to some extent, but Orledge comments that the war years brought "Satie's second lucky break", when [[Jean Cocteau]] heard Viñes and Satie perform the ''Trois morceaux'' in 1916. This led to the commissioning of the ballet ''[[Parade (ballet)|Parade]]'', premiered in 1917 by [[Sergei Diaghilev]]'s [[Ballets Russes]], with music by Satie, sets and costumes by [[Pablo Picasso]], and choreography by [[Léonide Massine]]. This was a ''[[succès de scandale]]'', with jazz rhythms and instrumentation including parts for typewriter, steamship whistle and siren. It firmly established Satie's name before the public, and thereafter his career centred on the theatre, writing mainly to commission.<ref name=grove/> |
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In October 1916 Satie received a commission from the [[Princesse de Polignac]] that resulted in what Orledge rates as the composer's masterpiece, ''[[Socrate]]'', two years later. Satie set translations from [[Plato]]'s Dialogues as a "symphonic drama". Its composition was interrupted in 1917 by a libel suit brought against him by a music critic, Jean Poueigh, which nearly resulted in a jail sentence for Satie. When ''Socrate'' was premiered, Satie called it "a return to classical simplicity with a modern sensibility", and among those who admired the work was [[Igor Stravinsky]], a composer whom Satie regarded with awe.<ref name=grove/><ref name=gresham/> |
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As a result of his contact with Roland-Manuel, Satie again began publicising his thoughts, with far more irony than he had done before (amongst other things, the ''{{Lang|fr|Mémoires d'un amnésique}}'' and ''{{Lang|fr|Cahiers d'un mammifère}}'').<ref>English translations of these pieces were published in ''A Mammal's Notebook'', see [[#Sources|Sources]] section below.{{Failed verification|date=October 2017}}<!--Nothing of this title in the mentioned section, and it should be referenced by author, if any.--></ref> |
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In his later years Satie became known for his prose. He was in demand as a journalist, making contributions to the ''Revue musicale'', ''Action'', ''L'Esprit nouveau'', the ''Paris-Journal''<ref>Gillmor, p. xxv</ref> and other publications from the [[Dada]]ist ''[[391 (magazine)|391]]''<ref>[http://www.artic.edu/reynolds/essays/hofmann2.php "Documents of Dada and Surrealism: Dada and Surrealist Journals in the Mary Reynolds Collection"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150212081937/http://www.artic.edu/reynolds/essays/hofmann2.php |date=2015-02-12 }}, Artic.edu. Retrieved 17 September 2021</ref> to the English-language magazines ''[[Vanity Fair (American magazine 1913–36)|Vanity Fair]]'' and ''[[The Transatlantic Review]]''.<ref name=grove/><ref>Orledge, p. xxxviii</ref> As he contributed anonymously or under pen names to some publications it is not certain how many titles he wrote for, but ''[[Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians|Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians]]'' lists 25.<ref name=grove/> Satie's habit of embellishing the scores of his compositions with all kinds of written remarks became so established that he had to insist that they must not be read out during performances.{{refn|He wrote in the first edition of ''[[Heures séculaires et instantanées]]'', I forbid anyone to read the text aloud during the musical performance. Ignorance of my instructions will incur my righteous indignation against the presumptuous culprit. No exception will be allowed".<ref>Williamson, p, 176</ref>|group=n}} |
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With Jean Cocteau, whom he had first met in 1915,<ref>Elliott Antokoletz, ''A History of Twentieth-Century Music in a Theoretic-Analytical Context'', Routledge 2014 p.208</ref> Satie started work on incidental music for a production of [[William Shakespeare|Shakespeare]]'s ''[[A Midsummer Night's Dream]]'', resulting in the ''[[Cinq grimaces pour Le songe d'une nuit d'été]]''. From 1916, he and Cocteau worked on the ballet ''[[Parade (ballet)|Parade]]'', which was premiered in 1917 by [[Sergei Diaghilev]]'s [[Ballets Russes]], with sets and costumes by [[Pablo Picasso]], and choreography by [[Léonide Massine]]. Through Picasso, Satie also became acquainted with other [[cubism|cubists]], such as [[Georges Braque]], with whom he would work on other, aborted, projects. |
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In 1920 there was a festival of Satie's music at the [[Salle Erard]] in Paris.<ref>Gillmor, p. xxiv</ref> In 1924 the ballets ''[[Mercure (ballet)|Mercure]]'' (with choreography by Massine and décor by Picasso) and ''[[Relâche (ballet)|Relâche]]'' ("Cancelled") (in collaboration with [[Francis Picabia]] and [[René Clair]]), both provoked headlines with their first night scandals.<ref name=grove/> |
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[[File:Erik Satie composer.jpg|thumb|left|upright|''Erik Satie'', by Donald Sheridan]] |
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[[File:Satie Cropped.jpg|thumb|upright=0.75|Satie in his later years|alt=older version of Satie images reproduced above]] |
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Despite being a musical iconoclast, and encourager of modernism, Satie was uninterested to the point of antipathy about innovations such as the telephone, the gramophone and the radio. He made no recordings, and as far as is known heard only a single radio broadcast (of Milhaud's music) and made only one telephone call.<ref name=gresham/> Although his personal appearance was customarily immaculate, his room at Arcueil was in Orledge's word "squalid", and after his death the scores of several important works believed lost were found among the accumulated rubbish.<ref>Potter (2016), pp. 239 and 241</ref> He was incompetent with money. Having depended to a considerable extent on the generosity of friends in his early years, he was little better off when he began to earn a good income from his compositions, as he spent or gave away money as soon as he received it.<ref name=gresham/> He liked children, and they liked him, but his relations with adults were seldom straightforward. One of his last collaborators, Picabia, said of him: |
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{{blockquote|Satie's case is extraordinary. He's a mischievous and cunning old artist. At least, that's how he thinks of himself. Myself, I think the opposite! He's a very susceptible man, arrogant, a real sad child, but one who is sometimes made optimistic by alcohol. But he's a good friend, and I like him a lot.<ref name=gresham/>|}} |
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Throughout his adult life Satie was a heavy drinker, and in 1925 his health collapsed. He was taken to the Hôpital Saint-Joseph in Paris, diagnosed with [[cirrhosis]] of the liver. He died there at 8.00 p.m. on 1 July, at the age of 59.<ref>Gillmor, p. 258</ref> He was buried in the cemetery at Arcueil.<ref>Gillmor, p. 259</ref> |
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==Works== |
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With [[Georges Auric]], [[Louis Durey]], [[Arthur Honegger]], and [[Germaine Tailleferre]], Satie formed the [[Les Six|Nouveaux jeunes]], shortly after writing ''Parade''. Later, the group was joined by [[Francis Poulenc]] and [[Darius Milhaud]]. In September 1918, Satie – giving little or no explanation – withdrew from the {{Lang|fr|Nouveaux jeunes}}. Jean Cocteau gathered the six remaining members, forming the [[Les Six|Groupe des six]] (to which Satie would later have access, but later again would fall out with most of its members). |
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===Music=== |
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From 1919, Satie was in contact with [[Tristan Tzara]], the initiator of the [[Dada]] movement. He became acquainted with other artists involved in the movement, such as [[Francis Picabia]] (later to become a [[surrealism|Surrealist]]), [[André Derain]], [[Marcel Duchamp]], [[Jean Hugo]] and [[Man Ray]], among others. On the day of his first meeting with Man Ray, the two fabricated the artist's first [[readymade]]: ''[[The Gift (sculpture)|The Gift]]'' (1921). Satie contributed writing to the Dadaist publication ''[[391 (magazine)|391]]''. In the first months of 1922, he was surprised to find himself entangled in the argument between Tzara and [[André Breton]] about the true nature of avant-garde art, epitomised by the failure of the Congrès de Paris. Satie originally sided with Tzara, but managed to maintain friendly relations with most players in both camps. Meanwhile, an "{{Lang|fr|Ecole d'Arcueil}}" had formed around Satie, taking the name from the relatively remote district of Paris where Satie lived;<ref>Anderson, Keith, ''Sleeve Notes The Best of Erik Satie'', Naxos 8.556688</ref> it included young musicians such as [[Henri Sauguet]], [[Maxime Jacob]], [[Roger Désormière]] and [[Henri Cliquet-Pleyel]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161223074200/http://classic-intro.net/introductionalamusique/vingtieme4-1.html|title=INTRODUCTION A LA MUSIQUE CLASSIQUE - Le XXe siècle : Les compositeurs|date=23 December 2016|website=web.archive.org}}</ref> |
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{{see also|List of compositions by Erik Satie}} |
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In the view of the ''Oxford Dictionary of Music'', Satie's importance lay in "directing a new generation of French composers away from [[Richard Wagner|Wagner]]‐influenced [[Impressionism in music|impressionism]] towards a leaner, more epigrammatic style".<ref name=odm/> Debussy christened him "the precursor" because of his early harmonic innovations.<ref name=ocm/> Satie summed up his musical philosophy in 1917: |
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{{blockquote|To have a feeling for harmony is to have a feeling for tonality… the melody is the Idea, the outline; as much as it is the form and the subject matter of a work. The harmony is an illumination, an exhibition of the object, its reflection.<ref>''Quoted'' in Orledge, p. 68</ref>|}} |
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[[File:Satie Gymnopedie No. 3 for piano solo 02.png|thumb|upright=1.75|left|''Gymnopédie'' No. 3|alt=musical score with simple, slow music for solo piano]] |
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{{unreferenced section|date=June 2018}} |
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Other work and episodes in this last period of Satie's life: |
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* Since 1911 he had been on friendly terms with [[Igor Stravinsky]], about whom he would later write articles. |
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* ''[[Le Piège de Méduse|Le piège de Méduse]]'' (1913) had a unique position in Satie's [[Work of art|oeuvre]], as it was a stage work conceived and composed seemingly without any collaboration with other artists. |
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* ''[[Sports et divertissements]]'' was a kind of multi-media project, in which Satie provided piano music to drawings made by [[Charles Martin (artist)|Charles Martin]]. The work was composed in 1914, but not published or performed until the early 1920s. The individual pieces are characteristic Satie "miniatures": in all, there are twenty pieces - none over two minutes in length, and some as short as 15 seconds. |
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* He got in trouble over an insulting postcard he had written to one of his critics shortly after the premiere of ''Parade''; he was condemned to a week of imprisonment, but was finally released as a result of the (financial) intercession of [[Winnaretta Singer]], Princess Edmond de Polignac. |
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* Singer, who had learnt Ancient Greek when she was over 50, had commissioned a work on [[Socrates]] in October 1916; this would become his ''[[Vie de Socrate|Socrate]]'', which he presented early in 1918 to the Princess. |
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* From 1917 Satie wrote five pieces of ''[[furniture music]]'' ("Musique d'ameublement") for different occasions. |
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* From 1920, he was on friendly terms with the circles around [[Gertrude Stein]], amongst others, leading to the publication of some of his articles in ''[[Vanity Fair magazine|Vanity Fair]]'' (commissioned by Sibyl Harris). |
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* Some works would originate under the patronage of the count Etienne de Beaumont, from 1922 onwards: |
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** ''[[La statue retrouvée]]'' (or "Divertissement"): another Satie-Cocteau-Picasso-Massine collaboration. |
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** ''[[Ludions]]'': a setting of [[nonsense verse|nonsense rhyme]] by [[Léon-Paul Fargue]] |
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** ''[[Mercure (ballet)|Mercure]]'': the subtitle of this piece ("Poses plastiques") suggests it might have been intended rather as an emulation of the [[tableau vivant]] genre than as an actual ballet, the "tableaux" being cubist, by Picasso (and Massine). |
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* During his final years Satie travelled; for example, in 1924 to Belgium, invited by Paul Collaer, and to [[Monte Carlo]] for the premiere of a work on which he had collaborated. |
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Among his earliest compositions were sets of three ''[[Gymnopédies]]'' (1888) and his ''[[Gnossiennes]]'' (1889 onwards) for piano. They evoke the ancient world by what the critics [[Roger Nichols (musical scholar)|Roger Nichols]] and [[Paul Griffiths (writer)|Paul Griffiths]] describe as "pure simplicity, monotonous repetition, and highly original [[Mode (music)|modal]] harmonies".<ref name=ocm>Griffiths, Paul, and Roger Nichols. [https://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780199579037.001.0001/acref-9780199579037-e-5901 "Satie, Erik (Eric) (Alfred Leslie)"], ''The Oxford Companion to Music'', Oxford University Press, 2011. Retrieved 18 September 2021 {{subscription required}} {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210918130322/https://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780199579037.001.0001/acref-9780199579037-e-5901 |date=18 September 2021}}</ref> |
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Satie's last compositions were two 1924 ballets. ''[[Mercure (ballet)|Mercure]]'' reunited him with Picasso and Massine for a mythological spoof produced by Count Étienne de Beaumont's Soirées de Paris, and he wrote the "{{Lang|fr|instantaneist}}" ballet ''{{Lang|fr|[[Relâche (ballet)|Relâche]]}}'' in collaboration with Picabia, for the {{Lang|fr|[[Ballets suédois]]}} of [[Rolf de Maré]]. In a simultaneous project, Satie added music to the surrealist film ''{{Lang|fr|[[Entr'acte (film)|Entr'acte]]}}'' by [[René Clair]], which was given as an intermezzo for ''{{Lang|fr|Relâche}}''. |
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It is possible that their simplicity and originality were influenced by Debussy; it is also possible that it was Satie who influenced Debussy.<ref name=odm>Kennedy, Joyce, Michael Kennedy, and Tim Rutherford-Johnson. [https://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780199578108.001.0001/acref-9780199578108-e-7968 "Satie, Erik (Eric) Alfred Leslie"], ''The Oxford Dictionary of Music'', Oxford University Press, 2013. Retrieved 18 September 2021 {{subscription required}} {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210918130322/https://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780199578108.001.0001/acref-9780199578108-e-7968 |date=18 September 2021 }}</ref> During the brief spell when Satie was composer to Péladan's sect he adopted a similarly austere manner.<ref name=odm/> |
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While Satie was earning his living as a café pianist in Montmartre he contributed songs and little waltzes. After moving to Arcueil he began to write works with quirky titles, such as the seven-movement suite ''[[Trois morceaux en forme de poire]]'' ("Three Pear-shaped Pieces") for piano four-hands (1903), simply-phrased music that Nichols and Griffiths describe as "a résumé of his music since 1890" – reusing some of his earlier work as well as popular songs of the time.<ref name=ocm/> He struggled to find his own musical voice. Orledge writes that this was partly because of his "trying to ape his illustrious peers … we find bits of Ravel in his miniature opera ''[[Geneviève de Brabant (Satie)|Geneviève de Brabant]]'' and echoes of both [[Gabriel Fauré|Fauré]] and Debussy in the ''Nouvelles pièces froides'' of 1907".<ref name=grove/> |
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After years of heavy drinking (including consumption of [[absinthe]]),<ref>{{cite book|title=Forgotten English|author=Jeffrey Kacirk|date=2009|isbn=978-0688166366|publisher=William Morrow Paperbacks}}</ref> Satie died at age 59, on 1 July 1925 from [[cirrhosis]] of the liver.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050225235640/http://humanitiesweb.org/human.php?s=c&p=a&a=i&ID=753|title=Erik Satie - Biography|date=25 February 2005|website=web.archive.org}}</ref> He is buried in the cemetery in Arcueil. There is a tiny stone monument designating a grassy area in front of an apartment building – '{{not a typo|Parc}} Erik Satie'. Over the course of his 27 years in residence at [[Arcueil]], where Satie lived in stark simplicity,<ref>Anderson, Keith, Sleeve notes ''The Best of Erik Satie'' Naxos 8.556688</ref> no one had ever visited his room. After his death, Satie's friends discovered an apartment replete with squalor and chaos. Among many other unsorted papers and miscellaneous items, it contained a large number of umbrellas, and two grand pianos placed one on top of the other, the upper instrument used as storage for letters and parcels.<ref>Melissa Lesnie, "[http://www.limelightmagazine.com.au/Article/304597,five-things-you-didn-t-know-about-erik-satie.aspx Five Things You Didn't Know about Erik Satie]", ''[[Limelight (magazine)|Limelight]]'' (13 June 2012). Retrieved 22 October 2014.</ref> They discovered compositions that were thought to have been lost or were totally unknown. The score to ''[[Jack in the Box (Satie)|Jack in the Box]]'' was thought, by Satie, to have been left on a bus years before. These were found behind the piano, in the pockets of his velvet suits, and in other odd places, and included ''[[Vexations]]''; ''Geneviève de Brabant'' and other unpublished or unfinished stage works; ''The Dreamy Fish''; many [[Schola Cantorum]] exercises; a previously unseen set of "canine" piano pieces; and several other works for piano, many untitled. Some of these would be published later as additional ''{{Lang|fr|[[Gnossiennes]]}}'', ''{{Lang|fr|Pièces froides}}'', ''{{Lang|fr|Enfantines}}'', and ''[[furniture music]]''. {{citation needed|date=March 2016}} |
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After concluding his studies at the Schola Cantorum in 1912 Satie composed with greater confidence and more prolifically. Orchestration, despite his studies with d'Indy, was never his strongest suit,<ref>Orledge, p. 95; and Gillmor, p. 137</ref> but his grasp of counterpoint is evident in the opening bars of ''Parade'',<ref>Orledge, pp. 116 and 174</ref> and from the outset of his composing career he had original and distinctive ideas about harmony.<ref>Gillmor, p. 37</ref> In his later years he composed sets of short instrumental works with absurd titles, including ''[[Veritables Preludes flasques (pour un chien)]]'' ("True Flabby Preludes (for a Dog)", 1912), ''[[Croquis et agaceries d'un gros bonhomme en bois]]'' ("Sketches and Exasperations of a Big Wooden Man", 1913) and ''[[Sonatine bureaucratique]]'' ("Bureaucratic Sonata", 1917). |
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==Works== |
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[[File:Satie socrate manuscript.jpg|Manuscript of ''[[Socrate]]''|upright=1.5|thumb|alt=neatly written manuscript of musical score, with careful, calligraphic letters in red ink]] |
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In his neat, calligraphic hand,<ref>Gillmor, p. 208</ref> Satie would write extensive instructions for his performers, and although his words appear at first sight to be humorous and deliberately nonsensical, Nichols and Griffiths comment, "a sensitive pianist can make much of injunctions such as 'arm yourself with clairvoyance' and 'with the end of your thought'".<ref name="ocm" /> His ''Sonatine bureaucratique'' anticipates the [[Neoclassicism (music)|neoclassicism]] soon adopted by Stravinsky.<ref name=grove/> Despite his rancorous falling out with Debussy, Satie commemorated his long-time friend in 1920, two years after Debussy's death, in the anguished "Elégie", the first of the miniature song cycle ''[[Quatre petites mélodies (Satie)|Quatre petites mélodies]]''.<ref>Orledge, p. 39</ref> Orledge rates the cycle as the finest, though least known, of the four sets of short songs of Satie's last decade.<ref name=grove/> |
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===Music=== |
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{{main|List of compositions by Erik Satie}} |
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Satie invented what he called ''[[Musique d'ameublement]]'' – "furniture music" – a kind of background not to be listened to consciously. ''Cinéma'', composed for the René Clair film ''Entr'acte'', shown between the acts of ''Relâche'' (1924), is an example of early film music designed to be unconsciously absorbed rather than carefully listened to.<ref name=dance>Shattuck, Roger. [https://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780195173697.001.0001/acref-9780195173697-e-1543 "Satie, Erik"] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210918130334/https://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780195173697.001.0001/acref-9780195173697-e-1543 |date=18 September 2021}}, ''The International Encyclopedia of Dance'', Oxford University Press, 2005. Retrieved 18 September 2021 {{subscription required}}</ref> |
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Satie is regarded by some writers as an influence on [[Minimal music|minimalism]], which developed in the 1960s and later. The musicologist Mark Bennett and the composer [[Humphrey Searle]] have said that [[John Cage]]'s music shows Satie's influence,<ref>Bennett, p. 7</ref> and Searle and the writer Edward Strickland have used the term "minimalism" in connection with Satie's ''[[Vexations]]'', which the composer implied in his manuscript should be played over and over again 840 times.<ref>Potter (2016), p. 230; and Strickland, p. 124</ref> [[John Adams (composer)|John Adams]] included a specific homage to Satie's music in his 1996 ''[[Century Rolls]]''.<ref>Potter (2016), p. 252</ref> |
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===Writings=== |
===Writings=== |
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[[File:Tombe satie.jpg|thumb|right|Satie's grave bearing a white cross in [[Arcueil]], to the south of Paris]] |
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Satie's writings include: |
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Satie wrote extensively for the press, but unlike his professional colleagues such as Debussy and [[Paul Dukas|Dukas]] he did not write primarily as a music critic. Much of his writing is connected to music tangentially if at all. His biographer Caroline Potter describes him as "an experimental creative writer, a ''blagueur''{{refn|A ''blagueur'' is "a joker or prankster" according to the [[Merriam-Webster]] French-English dictionary.|group=n}} who provoked, mystified and amused his readers".<ref>Potter (2016), pp. 206–207</ref> He wrote ''[[Glossary of French expressions in English#Jeu d'esprit|jeux d'esprit]]'' claiming to eat dinner in four minutes with a diet of exclusively white food (including bones and fruit mould), or to drink boiled wine mixed with [[fuchsia]] juice, or to be woken by a servant hourly throughout the night to have his temperature taken;<ref>Weeks, pp. 83–84</ref> he wrote in praise of [[Beethoven]]'s non-existent but "sumptuous" Tenth Symphony, and the family of instruments known as the cephalophones, "which have a compass of thirty octaves and are absolutely unplayable".<ref>Dickinson, pp. 248 and 249</ref> |
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* ''A Mammal's Notebook: Collected Writings of Erik Satie'' (Serpent's Tail; Atlas Arkhive, No 5, 1997) {{ISBN|0-947757-92-9}} (with introduction and notes by Ornella Volta, translations by Anthony Melville, contains several drawings by Satie) |
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* ''{{Lang|fr|Correspondence presque complète: Réunie, établie et présentée par Ornella Volta}}'' (Paris: Fayard/Imes, 2000; 1265 pages) {{ISBN|2-213-60674-9}} (an almost complete edition of Satie's letters, in French) |
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Satie grouped some of these writings under the general headings ''Cahiers d'un mammifère'' (A Mammal's Notebook) and ''Mémoires d'un amnésique'' (Memoirs of an Amnesiac), indicating, as Potter comments, that "these are not autobiographical writings in the conventional manner".<ref>Potter (2016), p. 207</ref> He claimed the major influence on his humour was [[Oliver Cromwell]], adding "I also owe much to [[Christopher Columbus]], because the American spirit has occasionally tapped me on the shoulder and I have been delighted to feel its ironically glacial bite".<ref>''Quoted'' in Dickinson, p. 247</ref> |
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==References== |
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{{Reflist|30em|refs= |
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His published writings include: |
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<ref name="Föreningen"> |
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* ''A Mammal's Notebook: Collected Writings of Erik Satie'' (Serpent's Tail; Atlas Arkhive, No 5, 1997) {{ISBN|0-947757-92-9}} (with introduction and notes by Ornella Volta, translations by Anthony Melville, contains several drawings by Satie) |
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{{cite web |
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* ''{{Lang|fr|Correspondence presque complète: Réunie, établie et présentée par Ornella Volta}}'' (Paris: Fayard/Imes, 2000; 1265 pages) {{ISBN|2-213-60674-9}} (an almost complete edition of Satie's letters, in French) |
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|url=http://www.af.lu.se/~fogwall/article5.html |
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* Nigel Wilkins, ''The Writings of Erik Satie'', London, 1980. |
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|title=Suzanne Valadon |
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|publisher=Akademiska Föreningen, [[Lund University]] |
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|accessdate=12 June 2010 |
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|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20101003121959/http://www.af.lu.se/~fogwall/article5.html |
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|archivedate=3 October 2010 }} |
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</ref> |
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==Notes, references and sources== |
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<ref name="grove"> |
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===Notes=== |
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{{cite web |
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{{Reflist|group=n}} |
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|url=http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/grove/music/40105 |
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|title=Erik Satie |
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===References=== |
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|last=Orledge |
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{{Reflist}} |
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|first=Robert |
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|work=Grove Music Online |
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|publisher=Oxford Music Online |
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|accessdate=17 April 2010 }} |
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</ref> |
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}} |
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===Sources=== |
===Sources=== |
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* {{cite book | last= Bennett | first= Mark | title= A Brief History of Minimalism | year= 1995 | location= Ann Arbor | publisher=UMI| oclc= 964203894}} |
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{{refbegin}} |
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* {{cite book | last= Dickinson | first= Peter | title= Words and Music| year= 2016| location= Woodbridge | publisher= Boydell Press | isbn= 978-1-78327-106-1}} |
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* Allan, Kenneth R. "Metamorphosis in ''391'': A Cryptographic Collaboration by Francis Picabia, Man Ray, and Erik Satie." ''Art History'' 34, No. 1 (February 2011): 102–125. |
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* {{cite book | last= Dietschy | first= Marcel | title= A Portrait of Claude Debussy | year=1999 | location= Oxford | publisher= Clarendon | isbn= 978-0-19-315469-8}} |
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* Davis, Mary E., ''Erik Satie''. Reaktion Books – Critical Lives. June 2007. {{ISBN|978-1-86189-321-5}} |
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* {{cite book | last = Duchen | first = Jessica |author-link= Jessica Duchen |year = 2000 | title = Gabriel Fauré | location = London | publisher = Phaidon | isbn = 978-0-7148-3932-5}} |
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* Gillmor, Alan M., ''Erik Satie'' (Twayne Pub., 1988, reissued 1992; 387 pages) {{ISBN|0-393-30810-3}} |
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* {{cite book | last =Gillmor| first= Alan | title= Erik Satie| year= 1988| location= Boston | publisher= Twayne | isbn= 978-0-8057-9472-4}} |
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* Myers, Rollo H., ''Erik Satie.'' (Dover Publications, New York 1968.) {{ISBN|0-486-21903-8}} |
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* {{cite book | last= Harding | first= James | author-link=James Harding (music writer) | title= Erik Satie | year= 1975| location= London | publisher= Secker & Warburg | oclc= 251432509 }} |
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* [[Robert Orledge|Orledge, Robert]], ''Satie Remembered'' (London: Faber and Faber, London, 1995) |
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* {{cite book | last= Innes | first= Christopher |author2= Maria Shevtsova| title=The Cambridge Introduction to Theatre Directing | year= 2013| location= Cambridge and New York | publisher= Cambridge University Press | isbn= 978-0-521-84449-9 }} |
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* Orledge, Robert, ''Satie the Composer'' Cambridge University Press: 1990; 437 pages – in the series ''Music in the Twentieth Century'' (<nowiki>[ed.]</nowiki> Arnold Whittall) {{ISBN|0-521-35037-9}} |
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* {{cite book | last= Kelly | first= Barbara L. |chapter=History and Homage| title= The Cambridge Companion to Ravel|editor= Deborah Mawer | year= 2000| location=Cambridge | publisher=Cambridge University Press | isbn=978-0-52-164856-1 }} |
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* Potter, Caroline, ''Erik Satie, a Parisian composer and his world''. (Woodbridge: Boydell Press, 2016) {{ISBN|9781783270835}} |
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* {{cite book | last= Lajoinie | first= Vincent |language=fr| title= Erik Satie | year= 1985| location= Lausanne | publisher= Age d'homme | oclc=417094292 }} |
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* [[Anne-Kathrin Peitz|Peitz, Anne-Kathrin]] (and Youlian Tabakov), ''Satiesfictions'' DVD. (Accentus Music, 2014). Arte/C Major Entertainment GmbH |
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* {{cite book | last= Lesure | first= François | author-link= François Lesure | title= Claude Debussy: A Critical Biography | year= 2019| location=Rochester, NY | publisher=University of Rochester Press | isbn=978-1-58046-903-6 }} |
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* {{cite journal |last=Macchiarella |first=Lindsey |title=Early French Modernism Across Modalities: Erik Satie and Eugène Atget |journal=Music in Art: International Journal for Music Iconography |volume=42 |issue=1–2 |date=2017 |pages=309–328 |issn=1522-7464 }} |
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* {{cite book | last= Nichols | first= Roger|author-link=Roger Nichols (musical scholar)| title= The Harlequin Years: Music in Paris 1917–1929 | year= 2002| location=London | publisher=Thames and Hudson | isbn=978-0-500-51095-7 }} |
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* Templier, Pierre-Daniel (translated by Elena L. French and David S. French), ''Erik Satie'' (The MIT Press, 1969, reissued 1971) {{ISBN|0-262-70005-0}} ''and'' (New York: Da Capo Press, 1980 reissue) {{ISBN|0-306-76039-8}}. Note: Templier extensively consulted Conrad, Erik Satie's brother, when writing this first biography that appeared in 1932. The English translation was, however, criticised by [[John Cage]]; in a letter to Ornella Volta (25 May 1983) he referred to the translation as disappointing compared to the formidable value of the original biography. |
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* {{cite book | last= Orledge | first= Robert | author-link=Robert Orledge| title= Satie the Composer| year= 1990| location= Cambridge| publisher= Cambridge University Press|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QJ9OAAAAIAAJ | isbn= 978-0-521-35037-2}} |
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* Vella, Alfonso, "Satie, la subversión de la fantasía", Ediciones Península 2013 {{ISBN|978-84-9942-248-0}} |
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* {{cite book | last= Potter | first= Caroline | title= Erik Satie: A Parisian Composer and his World| year=2016 | location= Woodbridge | publisher= Boydell Press | isbn= 978-1-78327-083-5}} |
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* Volta, Ornella and Simon Pleasance, ''Erik Satie'' (Hazan: The Pocket Archives Series, 1997; 200 pages) {{ISBN|2-85025-565-3}} |
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* {{cite book | last= Potter | first= Caroline | title= French Music Since Berlioz | year= 2017| location=London | publisher=Routledge | isbn=978-1-315-09389-5 }}· |
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* Volta, Ornella, transl. Michael Bullock, ''Satie Seen Through His Letters'' (Marion Boyars, 1989) {{ISBN|0-7145-2980-X}} |
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* {{cite book | last= Rey | first= Anne|author-link=Anne Rey | title= Erik Satie| year= 1974| language=fr|location= Paris | publisher= Seuil | isbn= 978-2-02-000255-4}} |
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* Whiting, Steven, ''Satie the Bohemian: from Cabaret to Concert Hall'' (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1999; 596 pages) {{ISBN|978-0-19816-458-6}} |
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* {{cite book | last= Rosinsky | first=Thérèse Diamand | title =Suzanne Valadon | year= 1994| location= New York | publisher= Universe | isbn = 978-0-87663-777-7 }} |
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* [[Stephen Whittington|Whittington, Stephen]], "On the Centenary of Erik Satie's Vexations" (1994). |
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*{{cite book | last =Satie | first =Erik|editor=Ornella Volta | title = Écrits | date =1981|edition=second | location =Paris | publisher = Éditions Champ libre | isbn = 978-2-85184-073-8 }} |
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{{refend}} |
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* {{cite book | last= Strickland | first= Edward | title= Minimalism: Origins| year= 2000| location= Bloomington| publisher= Indiana University Press | isbn= 978-0-253-21388-4}} |
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* {{cite book | last= Templier | first= Pierre-Daniel | title= Erik Satie| year= 1969| location= Cambridge, Mass |url=https://archive.org/details/eriksatie00temp/page/10/mode/2up| publisher= MIT Press | oclc= 1034659768}} |
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* {{cite book | last= Weeks | first= David | title= Eccentrics| year= 1995| location= London | publisher= Weidenfeld & Nicolson | isbn= 978-0-297-81447-4}} |
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* {{cite book | last= Whiting | first= Steven Moore | title= Satie the Bohemian: From Cabaret to Concert Hall | year= 1999| location= Oxford | publisher= Oxford University Press | isbn=978-0-19-816458-6 }} |
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* {{cite book | last= Williamson | first= John | title= Words and Music | year= 2005| location= Liverpool | publisher= Liverpool University Press | isbn= 978-0-85323-619-1 }} |
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===Further reading=== |
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* {{cite book | author=Shattuck, Roger | title=The Banquet Years: The Arts in France, 1885–1918: Alfred Jarry, Henri Rousseau, Erik Satie, Guillaume Apollinaire | location=U.S. | publisher=Henry Holt and Company | year=1958 | isbn=0-394-70415-0}} |
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* {{cite book | author=Shattuck, Roger | title=The Banquet Years: The Origins of the Avant-Garde in France, 1885 to World War I. | location=U.S. | publisher=Freeport, N.Y., Books for Libraries Press | year=1968 | isbn=0836928261}} Revised edition of 1958 book. |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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* {{IMDb name|id=0006273}} |
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* [https://www.francemusique.fr/personne/erik-satie Erik Satie] on [[France Musique]] |
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*[https://web.archive.org/web/20041011182313/http://www.af.lu.se/~fogwall/satie.html Satie Home page] – Niclas Fogwall's former Satie website as archived at the WayBackMachine |
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*{{Find a Grave|4404}} |
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*[http://www.ubu.com/sound/satie.html UbuWeb's Erik Satie pages] – including an Erik Satie Primer and downloadable recordings |
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*[http://www.jazclass.aust.com/satie.htm About Erik Satie – The eccentric Impressionist French composer and musician] |
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*[http://www.pytheasmusic.org/satie.html Erik Satie at Pytheas Center for Contemporary Music] |
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*{{fr icon}} [http://www.erik-satie.com/ erik-satie.com] Website dedicated to the musician, with blog, timeline, gallery, biography |
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* [http://www.allpianoscores.com/index.php?free_scores=Satie Satie scores & audio] at {{url|www.allpianoscores.com}} |
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* {{IMSLP|id=Satie, Erik}} |
* {{IMSLP|id=Satie, Erik}} |
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* {{ChoralWiki|Erik Satie}} |
* {{ChoralWiki|Erik Satie}} |
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* [https://www.musees-honfleur.fr/menucacher.html "Maisons Satie"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170713170503/http://www.musees-honfleur.fr/maison-satie.html |date=13 July 2017 }} – Satie birthplace museum, Honfleur. |
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20110608050612/http://kreusch-sheet-music.net/eng/index.php?search_type=quick&show_box=true&search=true&page=search&order=op&query=Erik+Satie www.kreusch-sheet-music.net] Free Scores by Satie |
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* [http://www.mutopiaproject.org/cgibin/make-table.cgi?Composer=SatieE&preview=1 Satie's Scores] – by the [[Mutopia Project]] |
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Latest revision as of 21:59, 4 January 2025
Eric Alfred Leslie Satie[n 1] (17 May 1866 – 1 July 1925), who signed his name Erik Satie after 1884, was a French composer and pianist. He was the son of a French father and a British mother. He studied at the Paris Conservatoire, but was an undistinguished student and obtained no diploma. In the 1880s he worked as a pianist in café-cabaret in Montmartre, Paris, and began composing works, mostly for solo piano, such as his Gymnopédies and Gnossiennes. He also wrote music for a Rosicrucian sect to which he was briefly attached.
After a spell in which he composed little, Satie entered Paris's second music academy, the Schola Cantorum, as a mature student. His studies there were more successful than those at the Conservatoire. From about 1910 he became the focus of successive groups of young composers attracted by his unconventionality and originality. Among them were the group known as Les Six. A meeting with Jean Cocteau in 1915 led to the creation of the ballet Parade (1917) for Serge Diaghilev, with music by Satie, sets and costumes by Pablo Picasso, and choreography by Léonide Massine.
Satie's example guided a new generation of French composers away from post-Wagnerian impressionism towards a sparer, terser style. Among those influenced by him during his lifetime were Maurice Ravel, Claude Debussy, and Francis Poulenc, and he is seen as an influence on more recent composers such as John Cage and John Adams. His harmony is often characterised by unresolved chords, he sometimes dispensed with bar-lines, as in his Gnossiennes, and his melodies are generally simple and often reflect his love of old church music. He gave some of his later works absurd titles, such as Veritables Preludes flasques (pour un chien) ("True Flabby Preludes (for a Dog)", 1912), Croquis et agaceries d'un gros bonhomme en bois ("Sketches and Exasperations of a Big Wooden Man", 1913) and Sonatine bureaucratique ("Bureaucratic Sonatina", 1917). Most of his works are brief, and the majority are for solo piano. Exceptions include his "symphonic drama" Socrate (1919) and two late ballets Mercure and Relâche (1924).
Satie never married, and his home for most of his adult life was a single small room, first in Montmartre and, from 1898 to his death, in Arcueil, a suburb of Paris. He adopted various images over the years, including a period in quasi-priestly dress, another in which he always wore identically coloured velvet suits, and is known for his last persona, in neat bourgeois costume, with bowler hat, wing collar, and umbrella. He was a lifelong heavy drinker, and died of cirrhosis of the liver at the age of 59.
Life and career
[edit]Early years
[edit]Satie was born on 17 May 1866 in Honfleur, Normandy, the first child of Alfred Satie and his wife Jane Leslie (née Anton). Jane Satie was an English Protestant of Scottish descent; Alfred Satie, a shipping broker, was a Roman Catholic anglophobe.[3] A year later, the Saties had a daughter, Olga, and in 1869 a second son, Conrad. The children were baptised in the Anglican church.[3]
After the Franco-Prussian War Alfred Satie sold his business and the family moved to Paris, where he eventually set up as a music publisher.[4] In 1872 Jane Satie died and Eric and his brother were sent back to Honfleur to be brought up by Alfred's parents. The boys were rebaptised as Roman Catholics and educated at a local boarding school, where Satie excelled in history and Latin but nothing else.[5] In 1874 he began taking music lessons with a local organist, Gustave Vinot, a former pupil of Louis Niedermeyer. Vinot stimulated Satie's love of old church music, and in particular Gregorian chant.[6]
In 1878 Satie's grandmother died,[n 2] and the two boys returned to Paris to be informally educated by their father. Satie did not attend a school, but his father took him to lectures at the Collège de France and engaged a tutor to teach Eric Latin and Greek. Before the boys returned to Paris from Honfleur, Alfred had met a piano teacher and salon composer, Eugénie Barnetche, whom he married in January 1879, to the dismay of the twelve-year-old Satie, who did not like her.[7]
Eugénie Satie resolved that her elder stepson should become a professional musician, and in November 1879 enrolled him in the preparatory piano class at the Paris Conservatoire.[8] Satie strongly disliked the Conservatoire, which he described as "a vast, very uncomfortable, and rather ugly building; a sort of district prison with no beauty on the inside – nor on the outside, for that matter".[n 3] He studied solfeggio with Albert Lavignac and piano with Émile Decombes, who had been a pupil of Frédéric Chopin.[10] In 1880 Satie took his first examinations as a pianist: he was described as "gifted but indolent". The following year Decombes called him "the laziest student in the Conservatoire".[8] In 1882 he was expelled from the Conservatoire for his unsatisfactory performance.[4]
In 1884 Satie wrote his first known composition, a short Allegro for piano, written while on holiday in Honfleur. He signed himself "Erik" on this and subsequent compositions, though continuing to use "Eric" on other documents until 1906.[11] In 1885, he was readmitted to the Conservatoire, in the intermediate piano class of his stepmother's former teacher, Georges Mathias. He made little progress: Mathias described his playing as "Insignificant and laborious" and Satie himself "Worthless. Three months just to learn the piece. Cannot sight-read properly".[12][n 4] Satie became fascinated by aspects of religion. He spent much time in Notre-Dame de Paris contemplating the stained glass windows and in the National Library examining obscure medieval manuscripts.[15] His friend Alphonse Allais later dubbed him "Esotérik Satie".[16] From this period comes Ogives, a set of four piano pieces inspired by Gregorian chant and Gothic church architecture.[17]
Keen to leave the Conservatoire, Satie volunteered for military service, and joined the 33rd Infantry Regiment in November 1886.[18] He quickly found army life no more to his liking than the Conservatoire, and deliberately contracted acute bronchitis by standing in the open, bare-chested, on a winter night.[19] After three months' convalescence he was invalided out of the army.[8][20]
Montmartre
[edit]In 1887, at the age of 21, Satie moved from his father's residence to lodgings in the 9th arrondissement. By this time he had started what was to be an enduring friendship with the romantic poet Contamine de Latour, whose verse he set in some of his early compositions, which Satie senior published.[8] His lodgings were close to the popular Chat Noir cabaret on the southern edge of Montmartre where he became an habitué and then a resident pianist. The Chat Noir was known as the "temple de la 'convention farfelue'" – the temple of zany convention,[21] and as the biographer Robert Orledge puts it, Satie, "free from his restrictive upbringing … enthusiastically embraced the reckless bohemian lifestyle and created for himself a new persona as a long-haired man-about-town in frock coat and top hat". This was the first of several personas that Satie invented for himself over the years.[8]
In the late 1880s Satie styled himself on at least one occasion "Erik Satie – gymnopédiste",[22][n 5] and his works from this period include the three Gymnopédies (1888) and the first Gnossiennes (1889 and 1890). He earned a modest living as pianist and conductor at the Chat Noir, before falling out with the proprietor and moving to become second pianist at the nearby Auberge du Clou. There he became a close friend of Claude Debussy, who proved a kindred spirit in his experimental approach to composition. Both were bohemians, enjoying the same café society and struggling to survive financially.[24] At the Auberge du Clou Satie first encountered the flamboyant, self-styled "Sâr" Joséphin Péladan, for whose mystic sect, the Ordre de la Rose-Croix Catholique du Temple et du Graal, he was appointed composer.[25] This gave him scope for experiment, and Péladan's salons at the fashionable Galerie Durand-Ruel gained Satie his first public hearings.[8][26] Frequently short of money, Satie moved from his lodgings in the 9th arrondissement to a small room in the rue Cortot not far from Sacre-Coeur,[27] so high up the Butte Montmartre that he said he could see from his window all the way to the Belgian border.[n 6]
By mid-1892, Satie had composed the first pieces in a compositional system of his own making (Fête donnée par des Chevaliers Normands en l'honneur d'une jeune demoiselle), provided incidental music to a chivalric esoteric play (two Préludes du Nazaréen), had a hoax published (announcing the premiere of his non-existent Le bâtard de Tristan, an anti-Wagnerian opera),[29] and broken away from Péladan, starting that autumn with the "Uspud" project, a "Christian Ballet", in collaboration with Latour.[30] He challenged the musical establishment by proposing himself – unsuccessfully – for the seat in the Académie des Beaux-Arts made vacant by the death of Ernest Guiraud.[31][n 7] Between 1893 and 1895, Satie, affecting a quasi-priestly dress, was the founder and only member of the Eglise Métropolitaine d'Art de Jésus Conducteur. From his "Abbatiale" in the rue Cortot, he published scathing attacks on his artistic enemies.[8]
In 1893 Satie had what is believed to be his only love affair, a five-month liaison with the painter Suzanne Valadon. After their first night together, he proposed marriage. The two did not marry, but Valadon moved to a room next to Satie's at the rue Cortot. Satie became obsessed with her, calling her his Biqui and writing impassioned notes about "her whole being, lovely eyes, gentle hands, and tiny feet".[33] During their relationship Satie composed the Danses gothiques as a means of calming his mind,[34] and Valadon painted his portrait, which she gave him. After five months she moved away, leaving him devastated. He said later that he was left with "nothing but an icy loneliness that fills the head with emptiness and the heart with sadness".[33]
In 1895 Satie attempted to change his image once again: this time to that of "the Velvet Gentleman". From the proceeds of a small legacy, he bought seven identical dun-coloured suits. Orledge comments that this change "marked the end of his Rose+Croix period and the start of a long search for a new artistic direction".[8]
Move to Arcueil
[edit]In 1898, in search of somewhere cheaper and quieter than Montmartre, Satie moved to a room in the southern suburbs, in the commune of Arcueil-Cachan, eight kilometres (five miles) from the centre of Paris.[35][36] This remained his home for the rest of his life. No visitors were ever admitted.[8] He joined a radical socialist party (he later switched his membership to the Communist Party),[37] but adopted a thoroughly bourgeois image: the biographer Pierre-Daniel Templier, writes, "With his umbrella and bowler hat, he resembled a quiet school teacher. Although a Bohemian, he looked very dignified, almost ceremonious".[38]
Satie earned a living as a cabaret pianist, adapting more than a hundred compositions of popular music for piano or piano and voice, adding some of his own. The most popular of these were Je te veux, text by Henry Pacory; Tendrement, text by Vincent Hyspa; Poudre d'or, a waltz; La Diva de l'Empire, text by Dominique Bonnaud/Numa Blès; Le Picadilly, a march; Légende californienne, text by Contamine de Latour (lost, but the music later reappears in La belle excentrique); and others. In his later years Satie rejected all his cabaret music as vile and against his nature.[39] Only a few compositions that he took seriously remain from this period: Jack in the Box, music to a pantomime by Jules Depaquit (called a "clownerie" by Satie); Geneviève de Brabant, a short comic opera to a text by "Lord Cheminot" (Latour); Le poisson rêveur (The Dreamy Fish), piano music to accompany a lost tale by Cheminot, and a few others that were mostly incomplete. Few were presented, and none published at the time.[40]
A decisive change in Satie's musical outlook came after he heard the premiere of Debussy's opera Pelléas et Mélisande in 1902. He found it "absolutely astounding", and he re-evaluated his own music.[8] In a determined attempt to improve his technique, and against Debussy's advice, he enrolled as a mature student at Paris's second main music academy, the Schola Cantorum in October 1905, continuing his studies there until 1912.[41] The institution was run by Vincent d'Indy, who emphasised orthodox technique rather than creative originality.[42] Satie studied counterpoint with Albert Roussel and composition with d'Indy, and was a much more conscientious and successful student than he had been at the Conservatoire in his youth.[43]
It was not until 1911, when he was in his mid-forties, that Satie came to the notice of the musical public in general. In January of that year Maurice Ravel played some early Satie works at a concert by the Société musicale indépendante, a forward-looking group set up by Ravel and others as a rival to the conservative Société nationale de musique.[44][n 8] Satie was suddenly seen as "the precursor and apostle of the musical revolution now taking place";[46] he became a focus for young composers. Debussy, having orchestrated the first and third Gymnopédies, conducted them in concert. The publisher Demets asked for new works from Satie, who was finally able to give up his cabaret work and devote himself to composition. Works such as the cycle Sports et divertissements (1914) were published in de luxe editions. The press began to write about Satie's music, and a leading pianist, Ricardo Viñes, took him up, giving celebrated first performances of some Satie pieces.[8]
Last years
[edit]Satie became the focus of successive groups of young composers, whom he first encouraged and then distanced himself from, sometimes rancorously, when their popularity threatened to eclipse his or they otherwise displeased him.[47] First were the "jeunes" – those associated with Ravel – and then a group known at first as the "nouveaux jeunes", later called Les Six, including Georges Auric, Louis Durey, Arthur Honegger, and Germaine Tailleferre, joined later by Francis Poulenc and Darius Milhaud.[8] Satie dissociated himself from the second group in 1918, and in the 1920s he became the focal point of another set of young composers including Henri Cliquet-Pleyel, Roger Désormière, Maxime Jacob and Henri Sauguet, who became known as the "Arcueil School".[48] In addition to turning against Ravel, Auric and Poulenc in particular,[49] Satie quarrelled with his old friend Debussy in 1917, resentful of the latter's failure to appreciate the more recent Satie compositions.[50] The rupture lasted for the remaining months of Debussy's life, and when he died the following year, Satie refused to attend the funeral.[51] A few of his protégés escaped his displeasure, and Milhaud and Désormière were among those who remained friends with him to the last.[52]
The First World War restricted concert-giving to some extent, but Orledge comments that the war years brought "Satie's second lucky break", when Jean Cocteau heard Viñes and Satie perform the Trois morceaux in 1916. This led to the commissioning of the ballet Parade, premiered in 1917 by Sergei Diaghilev's Ballets Russes, with music by Satie, sets and costumes by Pablo Picasso, and choreography by Léonide Massine. This was a succès de scandale, with jazz rhythms and instrumentation including parts for typewriter, steamship whistle and siren. It firmly established Satie's name before the public, and thereafter his career centred on the theatre, writing mainly to commission.[8]
In October 1916 Satie received a commission from the Princesse de Polignac that resulted in what Orledge rates as the composer's masterpiece, Socrate, two years later. Satie set translations from Plato's Dialogues as a "symphonic drama". Its composition was interrupted in 1917 by a libel suit brought against him by a music critic, Jean Poueigh, which nearly resulted in a jail sentence for Satie. When Socrate was premiered, Satie called it "a return to classical simplicity with a modern sensibility", and among those who admired the work was Igor Stravinsky, a composer whom Satie regarded with awe.[8][13]
In his later years Satie became known for his prose. He was in demand as a journalist, making contributions to the Revue musicale, Action, L'Esprit nouveau, the Paris-Journal[53] and other publications from the Dadaist 391[54] to the English-language magazines Vanity Fair and The Transatlantic Review.[8][55] As he contributed anonymously or under pen names to some publications it is not certain how many titles he wrote for, but Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians lists 25.[8] Satie's habit of embellishing the scores of his compositions with all kinds of written remarks became so established that he had to insist that they must not be read out during performances.[n 9]
In 1920 there was a festival of Satie's music at the Salle Erard in Paris.[57] In 1924 the ballets Mercure (with choreography by Massine and décor by Picasso) and Relâche ("Cancelled") (in collaboration with Francis Picabia and René Clair), both provoked headlines with their first night scandals.[8]
Despite being a musical iconoclast, and encourager of modernism, Satie was uninterested to the point of antipathy about innovations such as the telephone, the gramophone and the radio. He made no recordings, and as far as is known heard only a single radio broadcast (of Milhaud's music) and made only one telephone call.[13] Although his personal appearance was customarily immaculate, his room at Arcueil was in Orledge's word "squalid", and after his death the scores of several important works believed lost were found among the accumulated rubbish.[58] He was incompetent with money. Having depended to a considerable extent on the generosity of friends in his early years, he was little better off when he began to earn a good income from his compositions, as he spent or gave away money as soon as he received it.[13] He liked children, and they liked him, but his relations with adults were seldom straightforward. One of his last collaborators, Picabia, said of him:
Satie's case is extraordinary. He's a mischievous and cunning old artist. At least, that's how he thinks of himself. Myself, I think the opposite! He's a very susceptible man, arrogant, a real sad child, but one who is sometimes made optimistic by alcohol. But he's a good friend, and I like him a lot.[13]
Throughout his adult life Satie was a heavy drinker, and in 1925 his health collapsed. He was taken to the Hôpital Saint-Joseph in Paris, diagnosed with cirrhosis of the liver. He died there at 8.00 p.m. on 1 July, at the age of 59.[59] He was buried in the cemetery at Arcueil.[60]
Works
[edit]Music
[edit]In the view of the Oxford Dictionary of Music, Satie's importance lay in "directing a new generation of French composers away from Wagner‐influenced impressionism towards a leaner, more epigrammatic style".[61] Debussy christened him "the precursor" because of his early harmonic innovations.[62] Satie summed up his musical philosophy in 1917:
To have a feeling for harmony is to have a feeling for tonality… the melody is the Idea, the outline; as much as it is the form and the subject matter of a work. The harmony is an illumination, an exhibition of the object, its reflection.[63]
Among his earliest compositions were sets of three Gymnopédies (1888) and his Gnossiennes (1889 onwards) for piano. They evoke the ancient world by what the critics Roger Nichols and Paul Griffiths describe as "pure simplicity, monotonous repetition, and highly original modal harmonies".[62] It is possible that their simplicity and originality were influenced by Debussy; it is also possible that it was Satie who influenced Debussy.[61] During the brief spell when Satie was composer to Péladan's sect he adopted a similarly austere manner.[61]
While Satie was earning his living as a café pianist in Montmartre he contributed songs and little waltzes. After moving to Arcueil he began to write works with quirky titles, such as the seven-movement suite Trois morceaux en forme de poire ("Three Pear-shaped Pieces") for piano four-hands (1903), simply-phrased music that Nichols and Griffiths describe as "a résumé of his music since 1890" – reusing some of his earlier work as well as popular songs of the time.[62] He struggled to find his own musical voice. Orledge writes that this was partly because of his "trying to ape his illustrious peers … we find bits of Ravel in his miniature opera Geneviève de Brabant and echoes of both Fauré and Debussy in the Nouvelles pièces froides of 1907".[8]
After concluding his studies at the Schola Cantorum in 1912 Satie composed with greater confidence and more prolifically. Orchestration, despite his studies with d'Indy, was never his strongest suit,[64] but his grasp of counterpoint is evident in the opening bars of Parade,[65] and from the outset of his composing career he had original and distinctive ideas about harmony.[66] In his later years he composed sets of short instrumental works with absurd titles, including Veritables Preludes flasques (pour un chien) ("True Flabby Preludes (for a Dog)", 1912), Croquis et agaceries d'un gros bonhomme en bois ("Sketches and Exasperations of a Big Wooden Man", 1913) and Sonatine bureaucratique ("Bureaucratic Sonata", 1917).
In his neat, calligraphic hand,[67] Satie would write extensive instructions for his performers, and although his words appear at first sight to be humorous and deliberately nonsensical, Nichols and Griffiths comment, "a sensitive pianist can make much of injunctions such as 'arm yourself with clairvoyance' and 'with the end of your thought'".[62] His Sonatine bureaucratique anticipates the neoclassicism soon adopted by Stravinsky.[8] Despite his rancorous falling out with Debussy, Satie commemorated his long-time friend in 1920, two years after Debussy's death, in the anguished "Elégie", the first of the miniature song cycle Quatre petites mélodies.[68] Orledge rates the cycle as the finest, though least known, of the four sets of short songs of Satie's last decade.[8]
Satie invented what he called Musique d'ameublement – "furniture music" – a kind of background not to be listened to consciously. Cinéma, composed for the René Clair film Entr'acte, shown between the acts of Relâche (1924), is an example of early film music designed to be unconsciously absorbed rather than carefully listened to.[69]
Satie is regarded by some writers as an influence on minimalism, which developed in the 1960s and later. The musicologist Mark Bennett and the composer Humphrey Searle have said that John Cage's music shows Satie's influence,[70] and Searle and the writer Edward Strickland have used the term "minimalism" in connection with Satie's Vexations, which the composer implied in his manuscript should be played over and over again 840 times.[71] John Adams included a specific homage to Satie's music in his 1996 Century Rolls.[72]
Writings
[edit]Satie wrote extensively for the press, but unlike his professional colleagues such as Debussy and Dukas he did not write primarily as a music critic. Much of his writing is connected to music tangentially if at all. His biographer Caroline Potter describes him as "an experimental creative writer, a blagueur[n 10] who provoked, mystified and amused his readers".[73] He wrote jeux d'esprit claiming to eat dinner in four minutes with a diet of exclusively white food (including bones and fruit mould), or to drink boiled wine mixed with fuchsia juice, or to be woken by a servant hourly throughout the night to have his temperature taken;[74] he wrote in praise of Beethoven's non-existent but "sumptuous" Tenth Symphony, and the family of instruments known as the cephalophones, "which have a compass of thirty octaves and are absolutely unplayable".[75]
Satie grouped some of these writings under the general headings Cahiers d'un mammifère (A Mammal's Notebook) and Mémoires d'un amnésique (Memoirs of an Amnesiac), indicating, as Potter comments, that "these are not autobiographical writings in the conventional manner".[76] He claimed the major influence on his humour was Oliver Cromwell, adding "I also owe much to Christopher Columbus, because the American spirit has occasionally tapped me on the shoulder and I have been delighted to feel its ironically glacial bite".[77]
His published writings include:
- A Mammal's Notebook: Collected Writings of Erik Satie (Serpent's Tail; Atlas Arkhive, No 5, 1997) ISBN 0-947757-92-9 (with introduction and notes by Ornella Volta, translations by Anthony Melville, contains several drawings by Satie)
- Correspondence presque complète: Réunie, établie et présentée par Ornella Volta (Paris: Fayard/Imes, 2000; 1265 pages) ISBN 2-213-60674-9 (an almost complete edition of Satie's letters, in French)
- Nigel Wilkins, The Writings of Erik Satie, London, 1980.
Notes, references and sources
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ UK: /ˈsæti, ˈsɑːti/, US: /sæˈtiː, sɑːˈtiː/;[1][2] French: [eʁik sati]
- ^ Her death was mysterious: she was found drowned on the beach at Honfleur in unexplained circumstances.[3]
- ^ "un vaste bâtiment très inconfortable et assez vilain à voir – une sorte de local pénitencier sans aucun agrément extérieur – ni intérieur du reste".[9]
- ^ Satie's biographer Robert Orledge has conjectured that Satie had dyslexia, a condition that can make reading music as difficult as reading words.[13][14]
- ^ Later he referred to himself at least once as a "phonometrician" (meaning "someone who measures sounds") after being called "a clumsy but subtle technician" in a book about contemporary French composers published in 1911.[23]
- ^ "La vu s'étend jusqu'à la frontière belge".[28]
- ^ Satie repeated this gesture twice – on the deaths of Charles Gounod in 1894 and Ambroise Thomas in 1896. Professors from the Conservatoire were elected on both occasions.[32]
- ^ The pieces were the second Sarabande, the first prelude to Le Fils des étoiles and the third of the Gymnopédies.[45]
- ^ He wrote in the first edition of Heures séculaires et instantanées, I forbid anyone to read the text aloud during the musical performance. Ignorance of my instructions will incur my righteous indignation against the presumptuous culprit. No exception will be allowed".[56]
- ^ A blagueur is "a joker or prankster" according to the Merriam-Webster French-English dictionary.
References
[edit]- ^ Wells, John C. (2008). Longman Pronunciation Dictionary (3rd ed.). Longman. ISBN 978-1-4058-8118-0.
- ^ Jones, Daniel (2011). Roach, Peter; Setter, Jane; Esling, John (eds.). Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary (18th ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-15255-6.
- ^ a b c Rey, p. 11: "Erik Alfred Leslie Satie est né le 17 mai 1866 à Honfleur (Normandie) d'une mère anglaise et protestante, d'un père catholique et anglophobe, courtier maritime"
- ^ a b Gillmor, p. xix
- ^ Gillmor, p. 8
- ^ Gillmor, p. 9
- ^ Orledge, p. xix
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Orledge, Robert, revised by Caroline Potter. Satie, Erik (Eric) (Alfred Leslie)" Archived 18 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine, Grove Music Online, Oxford University Press, 2020. Retrieved 16 September 2021
- ^ Satie, p. 67
- ^ Cooper, Martin, and Charles Timbrell. "Cortot, Alfred", Grove Music Online, Oxford University Press, 2001. Retrieved 20 September 2021 (subscription required) Archived 1 April 2022 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Orledge, p. xx
- ^ Gillmor, p. xx
- ^ a b c d e Orledge, Robert. "Erik Satie: His music, the vision, his legacy" Archived 25 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine, Gresham College, 2021. Retrieved 17 September 2021
- ^ Ganschow, Leonore, Jenafer Lloyd-Jones, and T. R. Miles. "Dyslexia and Musical Notation", Annals of Dyslexia 1994, pp. 185–202 (subscription required) Archived 18 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Gillmor, p. 33
- ^ Harding, p. 35
- ^ Rey, p. 22; and Gillmor, p. 64
- ^ Gillmor, p. 12
- ^ Templier, pp. 10–11
- ^ Templier, p. 11
- ^ Rey, p. 14
- ^ Orledge, p. 6
- ^ Innes and Shevtsova, p. 151
- ^ Whiting, p. 172
- ^ Rey, p. 33
- ^ Gillmor, pp. 76–77
- ^ Rey, p. 17
- ^ Lajoinie, p. 21
- ^ Whiting, p. 151
- ^ Whiting, p. 156.
- ^ Whiting, p. 152
- ^ Pasler, Jann. "Dubois, (François Clément) Théodore", Grove Music Online, Oxford University Press. Retrieved 16 September 2021(subscription required) Archived 24 May 2021 at the Wayback Machine; and Duchen, p. 120
- ^ a b Rosinsky, p. 49
- ^ Orledge, p. 157
- ^ Giilmor, pp. 112–113
- ^ Journey planner Archived 17 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine, ViaMichelin. Retrieved 17 September 2021
- ^ Orledge, p. 233
- ^ Templier, p. 56
- ^ Gillmor, p. xxix
- ^ Whiting, p. 259
- ^ Rey, p. 61
- ^ "Schola Cantorum" Archived 2021-05-16 at the Wayback Machine, The Oxford Companion to Music, edited by Alison Latham, Oxford University Press, 2011.
- ^ Orledge, pp. 86 and 95
- ^ Kelly, Barbara L. "Ravel, Maurice", Grove Music Online, Oxford University Press. Retrieved 17 September 2021 (subscription required)
- ^ "Courrier Musicale" Archived 2021-09-17 at the Wayback Machine, Le Figaro, 14 January 1911, p. 7; and Gillmor, p. xxiii
- ^ Orledge, p. 2
- ^ Gillmor, p. 259; Potter (2017), p. 233; and Whiting, p. 493
- ^ Nichols, p. 264
- ^ Kelly, p. 15 (Ravel); and Schmidt, p. 13 (Auric and Poulenc)
- ^ Lesure, p. 333
- ^ Dietschy, p. 190
- ^ Orledge, p. 255
- ^ Gillmor, p. xxv
- ^ "Documents of Dada and Surrealism: Dada and Surrealist Journals in the Mary Reynolds Collection" Archived 2015-02-12 at the Wayback Machine, Artic.edu. Retrieved 17 September 2021
- ^ Orledge, p. xxxviii
- ^ Williamson, p, 176
- ^ Gillmor, p. xxiv
- ^ Potter (2016), pp. 239 and 241
- ^ Gillmor, p. 258
- ^ Gillmor, p. 259
- ^ a b c Kennedy, Joyce, Michael Kennedy, and Tim Rutherford-Johnson. "Satie, Erik (Eric) Alfred Leslie", The Oxford Dictionary of Music, Oxford University Press, 2013. Retrieved 18 September 2021 (subscription required) Archived 18 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b c d Griffiths, Paul, and Roger Nichols. "Satie, Erik (Eric) (Alfred Leslie)", The Oxford Companion to Music, Oxford University Press, 2011. Retrieved 18 September 2021 (subscription required) Archived 18 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Quoted in Orledge, p. 68
- ^ Orledge, p. 95; and Gillmor, p. 137
- ^ Orledge, pp. 116 and 174
- ^ Gillmor, p. 37
- ^ Gillmor, p. 208
- ^ Orledge, p. 39
- ^ Shattuck, Roger. "Satie, Erik" Archived 18 September 2021 at the Wayback Machine, The International Encyclopedia of Dance, Oxford University Press, 2005. Retrieved 18 September 2021 (subscription required)
- ^ Bennett, p. 7
- ^ Potter (2016), p. 230; and Strickland, p. 124
- ^ Potter (2016), p. 252
- ^ Potter (2016), pp. 206–207
- ^ Weeks, pp. 83–84
- ^ Dickinson, pp. 248 and 249
- ^ Potter (2016), p. 207
- ^ Quoted in Dickinson, p. 247
Sources
[edit]- Bennett, Mark (1995). A Brief History of Minimalism. Ann Arbor: UMI. OCLC 964203894.
- Dickinson, Peter (2016). Words and Music. Woodbridge: Boydell Press. ISBN 978-1-78327-106-1.
- Dietschy, Marcel (1999). A Portrait of Claude Debussy. Oxford: Clarendon. ISBN 978-0-19-315469-8.
- Duchen, Jessica (2000). Gabriel Fauré. London: Phaidon. ISBN 978-0-7148-3932-5.
- Gillmor, Alan (1988). Erik Satie. Boston: Twayne. ISBN 978-0-8057-9472-4.
- Harding, James (1975). Erik Satie. London: Secker & Warburg. OCLC 251432509.
- Innes, Christopher; Maria Shevtsova (2013). The Cambridge Introduction to Theatre Directing. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-84449-9.
- Kelly, Barbara L. (2000). "History and Homage". In Deborah Mawer (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to Ravel. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-52-164856-1.
- Lajoinie, Vincent (1985). Erik Satie (in French). Lausanne: Age d'homme. OCLC 417094292.
- Lesure, François (2019). Claude Debussy: A Critical Biography. Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press. ISBN 978-1-58046-903-6.
- Nichols, Roger (2002). The Harlequin Years: Music in Paris 1917–1929. London: Thames and Hudson. ISBN 978-0-500-51095-7.
- Orledge, Robert (1990). Satie the Composer. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-35037-2.
- Potter, Caroline (2016). Erik Satie: A Parisian Composer and his World. Woodbridge: Boydell Press. ISBN 978-1-78327-083-5.
- Potter, Caroline (2017). French Music Since Berlioz. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-315-09389-5.·
- Rey, Anne (1974). Erik Satie (in French). Paris: Seuil. ISBN 978-2-02-000255-4.
- Rosinsky, Thérèse Diamand (1994). Suzanne Valadon. New York: Universe. ISBN 978-0-87663-777-7.
- Satie, Erik (1981). Ornella Volta (ed.). Écrits (second ed.). Paris: Éditions Champ libre. ISBN 978-2-85184-073-8.
- Strickland, Edward (2000). Minimalism: Origins. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-21388-4.
- Templier, Pierre-Daniel (1969). Erik Satie. Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press. OCLC 1034659768.
- Weeks, David (1995). Eccentrics. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 978-0-297-81447-4.
- Whiting, Steven Moore (1999). Satie the Bohemian: From Cabaret to Concert Hall. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-816458-6.
- Williamson, John (2005). Words and Music. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press. ISBN 978-0-85323-619-1.
Further reading
[edit]- Shattuck, Roger (1958). The Banquet Years: The Arts in France, 1885–1918: Alfred Jarry, Henri Rousseau, Erik Satie, Guillaume Apollinaire. U.S.: Henry Holt and Company. ISBN 0-394-70415-0.
- Shattuck, Roger (1968). The Banquet Years: The Origins of the Avant-Garde in France, 1885 to World War I. U.S.: Freeport, N.Y., Books for Libraries Press. ISBN 0836928261. Revised edition of 1958 book.
External links
[edit]- Free scores by Erik Satie at the International Music Score Library Project (IMSLP)
- Free scores by Erik Satie in the Choral Public Domain Library (ChoralWiki)
- "Maisons Satie" Archived 13 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine – Satie birthplace museum, Honfleur.
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