Unavailable

Prelude to L'Histoire de Tristan is currently unavailable

We can no longer provide this arrangement through Sheet Music Stores. The listing stays online so you can learn about the piece and explore alternatives.

Try these next steps

About this arrangement

Orchestra - Grade 4 SKU: FA.MFCD007 Composed by Claude Debussy and Robert Orledge. Arranged by Orledge. Rediscoverd Debussy. Classical, Impressionistic. Score. Musik Fabrik #MFCD007. Published by Musik Fabrik (FA.MFCD007). 8.28 x 11.69 in inches.Scored for 21EH22/2200/timp/1perc/hp/strings Parts on rental. Debussy's friendship with the versatile poet and playwright Gabriel Mourey began in 1899, and inThe idea of a Tristan that restorced its 'legendary character' and had no connections with Wagner, appealed to Debussy, who was extremely moved by the circumstances of Tristan's death. Even if he thought that Mourey's poetry was "not very lyrical and many passages do not exactly "invite" music", he did work on the libretto and the music that summer and sent his pubisher Jacques Durand, 'one of the 363 themes for the "Roman de Tristan"' in a letter sent from Pourville on 23 August, 1907. The present prelude grows from this theme, together with the poignant Breton folksong "Le Faucon". After a short atmospheric introduction, Debussy's dance-like theme (which is definitely not a leitmotif) gradually gains momentum and after it reaches it ecstatic climas, representing the transient happiness of the lovers, it dissolves into an expressive coda and an elegiac close (all growing from Debussy's opennning, off-stage trumpet calls), leaving us with the ultimate tragedy of their ill-fated advice. July 1907, Mourey offered Debussy a libretto based on Le roman de Tristan - Joesph Bedier's adaptation of a twelfth-century Breton romance by the Anglo-Norman poet known as Tomas - which had recently been published in Paris. Debussy enthusiastically outline the four-act plot to Victor Segalen that October, and the main differences from Wagner's Tristan und Isolde are that none of the action takes place in Cornwal and that "Isolde of the white hands" is found guilty of cuckolding King Marc with Tristan, who has to rescue her from the leper colony in which she is abandoned in Act 1. She also betrays hi when he goes mad at the end.