Gabriel Pierne

Published: Jan. 15, 2024, 6 a.m.

Synopsis

On today\u2019s date in 1923, the belated premiere of a new ballet score by French composer Gabriel Piern\xe9 took place at the Palais Garnier, the home of the Paris Opera Ballet.


The ballet was finished in 1915, but due to the turmoil of World War I had to wait seven years to be staged.\xa0 Also, its lighthearted, even frivolous subject matter would hardly have seemed appropriate during the trauma of wartime, but it perfectly suited the giddy post-war Paris of the 1920s. The ballet was titled Cydalise et le Ch\xe8vre-Pied\xa0(literally "Cydalise\xa0and the Goat-Foot"\xa0or "Cydalise\xa0and the Satyr") and, like Ravel\u2019s ballet Daphnis et Chloe, featured a cast of nymphs, satyrs and the god Pan.


One excerpt of the ballet, known as "The Entry of the Little Fauns," became a popular concert selection on its own, although the complete score, like most of the other music by Piern\xe9, is rarely performed in concert these days.


Of late, however, more of Piern\xe9\u2019s melodious, well-crafted and oh-so-French scores have found their way to recordings. So anyone curious can sample more of his operas, his choral and symphonic works, and his solo piano and chamber music.


Music Played in Today's Program

Gabriel Piern\xe9 (1863-1937) \u2013 The Entry of the Little Fauns, from Cydalise et le Ch\xe8vre-Pied (Orchestre National de Lille; Darrell Ang, cond.) Naxos 8.5736090\xa0