{"id":325,"date":"2019-10-10T16:49:20","date_gmt":"2019-10-10T16:49:20","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.runyanprogramnotes.com\/program_note\/danse-macabre-op-40\/"},"modified":"2025-06-16T17:10:45","modified_gmt":"2025-06-16T17:10:45","slug":"danse-macabre-op-40","status":"publish","type":"program_note","link":"https:\/\/www.runyanprogramnotes.com\/program_note\/danse-macabre-op-40\/","title":{"rendered":"Danse macabre, op. 40 R 171"},"content":{"rendered":"<p> Camille Saint-Sa\u00ebns lived a long life, and was remarkable for his wide-ranging intellectual interests and abilities.&nbsp; As a child he was, of course, a precocious musical talent, but even then he evinced a strong natural interest in almost every academic subject&#8211;including, but certainly not restricted to, astronomy, archaeology, mathematics, religion, Latin, and Greek.&nbsp; In addition to a life of musical composition and virtuoso keyboard performance, he also enjoyed success as a music journalist, champion of early music (Handel and Bach), and leadership in encouraging French musical tradition.&nbsp; His father died when he was an infant, and he grew into middle age extraordinarily devoted to his mother&#8211;his marriage at the age of forty to a nineteen-year old did not last long.&nbsp; He simply left the house one day in 1881 and chose never to see her again; she died in 1950 at the age of ninety-five.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Saint-Sa\u00ebns went on to live an active life, filling an important r\u00f4le in the musical life of France&#8211;as performer, composer, author, spokesman, and scholar.&nbsp; He was peripatetic&#8211;researching Handel manuscripts in London, conducting concerts in Chicago and Philadelphia, visiting Uruguay and writing a hymn for their national holiday, and vacationing in the Canary Islands.&nbsp; He celebrated seventy-five years of concertizing in August of 1921 in his eighty-sixth year, and died a few months later.<\/p>\n<p> The <em>danse macabre<\/em>, or \u201cdance of death,\u201d is one of the most common themes in European art, literature, and music since the Middle Ages.&nbsp; The fourteenth century was an especially rough one, the \u201cBlack Death\u201d alone killing perhaps two hundred million souls in Europe\u2014not to mention the Hundred Year\u2019s War and various famines.&nbsp;&nbsp; In the face of almost certain, widespread, and early death, there arose the allegory of death dancing with everyone, regardless of station.&nbsp;&nbsp; The allegory appears in countless frescos, murals, and paintings in churches, is a common theme in drama, and the subject of woodcuts in early publications.&nbsp;&nbsp; The ubiquity of death is matched by an almost obsessive preoccupation in artistic representation.&nbsp; The most common imagery is that of death as a skeleton, dancing with a procession of souls that represent all of society:&nbsp; the Pope, emperors, the rich, the poor, beggars, children\u2014everyone leveled by their common end.&nbsp; An end that was certain, probably soon, and thus should be prepared for.&nbsp; That allegory is still with us as a common cultural artifact, and surfaces everywhere in the art of our time.<\/p>\n<p> The Romantics of the nineteenth century could not resist the historical, gloomy allusion, and composers from Berlioz, Liszt, and a host of others wove it into their compositions. Saint-Sa\u00ebns, while perhaps most comfortable with more abstract music, nevertheless was an equal master of telling \u201cstories\u201d in music.&nbsp; So, in the 1870s, influenced by the early innovator in \u201ctone poems,\u201d Franz Liszt, he composed four of his own.&nbsp;&nbsp; His <em>Danse macabre<\/em> from 1874 for orchestra is a re-working of a song that he had composed two years earlier with a text that vividly describes the figure of death scraping on his violin at midnight, cold winds blowing, as dancers leap, their bones \u201ccracking.\u201d<\/p>\n<p> He recast the vocal part as a solo violin, accompanied by an orchestra that includes the xylophone\u2014a perfect allusion to rattling bones.&nbsp; The solo harp opens with twelve sonorous notes depicting the stroke of midnight, followed by the entrance of the solo \u201cfiddle\u201d of death. Saint-Sa\u00ebns masterfully evokes the \u201cscratchy,\u201d sinister fiddle by calling for the instrument to be retuned by lowering the top E string to an E<sup>b<\/sup>\u2014thus giving the famous <em>diabolus in musica <\/em>(devil in music), or tritone, the fundamental dissonance in both harmony and melody.&nbsp; Two themes are heard:&nbsp; one in the solo flute, and the second a descending scale in the solo violin.&nbsp; They furnish the basic ideas of the piece. After a short fugal section, the famous <em>Dies ir\u00e6 <\/em>(day of wrath) from the chant in the Roman Catholic Requiem Mass is heard <em>staccato<\/em> in the woodwinds.&nbsp; This ominous theme appears in a wealth of compositions, perhaps most famously in Berlioz\u2019 <em>Symphonie fantastique<\/em>, but everywhere, from Haydn to John Williams\u2019 <em>Star Wars.<\/em>&nbsp; The ghastly dance continues, but eventually ends at dawn, heralded by a solo oboe depicting the cock\u2019s crow.&nbsp;&nbsp; The solo violin, now less ominous, and more consoling plays a short elegy, and the skeletons return to their graves&#8211;the rest live for another day.&nbsp; Halloween is over.<\/p>\n<p>&#8211;Wm. E. Runyan<\/p>\n<p>\u00a9 2017 William E. Runyan<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":0,"template":"","meta":{"_acf_changed":false},"program_note_tax":[27],"class_list":["post-325","program_note","type-program_note","status-publish","hentry","program_note_tax-camillesaint-sans"],"acf":[],"aioseo_notices":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.runyanprogramnotes.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/program_note\/325","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.runyanprogramnotes.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/program_note"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.runyanprogramnotes.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/program_note"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.runyanprogramnotes.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.runyanprogramnotes.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=325"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"program_note_tax","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.runyanprogramnotes.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/program_note_tax?post=325"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}