Hidden clue to composer's passion
Renoir was among the artists who depicted Parisian socialite Misia Sert |
The French composer, Maurice Ravel may have left a hidden message - a woman's name - inside his work.
A sequence of three notes occurring repeatedly through his work spells out the name of a famous Parisian socialite says Ravel expert David Lamaze.
He argues that the notes, E, B, A in musical notation, or "Mi-Si-La" in the French doh-re-mi scale, refer to Misia Sert, a close friend of Ravel's.
Well known in art circles, she was painted by Renoir and Toulouse-Lautrec.
Ravel never married, but Misia was married three times. Ravel composed some of his work while staying on a boat belonging to Misia and her second husband.
It has never been done before. To take one person and to place them at the centre of a life-long work Professor David Lamaze, Conservatoire de Rennes |
"It has never been done before. To take one person and to place them at the centre of a life-long work," says Professor Lamaze of the Conservatoire de Rennes, who is working on a book about Ravel and Misia.
Professor Lamaze believes Ravel was romantically inspired by Misia. "To put the feeling of love at the very central point of the creation without us knowing it. That is typical of Ravel, I think."
Secretive
Ravel was intensely private about both his work and his love life |
Ravel was notoriously secretive about all aspects of his life, from his compositional process to his private life, which has led to speculation that he may have been gay.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/7968024.stm
FREE PRESS REBUTTAL
We're supposed to buy the premise that "Mi-Si-La" in French refers to "Misia," a friend of Ravel's? If Ravel was such a perfectionist, where'd that extra "L" come from? Sorry, bub, close but no cigar, and I do mean that in the Freudian sense.
MD
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