Online Encyclopedia

BIZET EALEXANDRE CESAR

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Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 17 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BIZET EALEXANDRE CESAR 

LEOPOLD] GEORGES (1838-1875), French musical composer, was born at Bougival, near Paris, on the 25th of
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October 1838, the son of a singing-master . He displayed musical ability at an early -age, and was sent to the Paris Conservatoire, where he studied under Halevy and speedily distinguished himself, carrying off prizes for
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organ and fugue, and finally in 1857, after an ineffectual attempt in the previous
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year, the
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Grand Prix de Rome for a cantata called Cloris et Clotilde . A success of a different kind also befell him at this time . Offenbach, then manager of the Theatre
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des Bouffes-Parisiens, had organized a competition for an operetta, in which young Bizet was awarded the first prize in conjunction with Charles . Lecocq, each of them writing an operetta called Doc/cur Miracle . After the three years spent in Rome, an
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obligation imposed by the French government on the winners of the first prize at the Conservatoire, Bizet returned to Paris, where he achieved a reputation as a pianist and accompanist . On the 23rd of September 1863 his first opera,
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Les Pecheurs de perks, was brought out at the Theatre Lyrique, but owing possibly to the' somewhat uninteresting nature of the story, the opera did not enjoy a very long run . The qualities displayed by the composer, however, were amply recognized, although, the
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music was stated, by some critics, to exhibit traces of Wagnerian influence . Wagnerism at that period was a sort of spectre that haunted the
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imagination of many leading members of the musical press . It sufficed for a
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work to be at all out of the
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common for the epithet " Wagnerian" to be applied to it . The
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term, it may be said, was intended to be condemnatory, and it was applied with little understanding as to its real meaning . The score of the Pecheurs de perks contains several charming numbers; its dreamy melodies are well adapted to
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fit a story laid in Eastern climes, and the music reveals a decided dramatic temperament .

Some of its dances are now usually introduced into the

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fourth act of . Carmen . On the 3rd of
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June 1865 Bizet married a daughter of his old. master, Halevy . His ; second opera, La Jolie Fille de Perth, produced at the TheatreLyrique on 26th December 1867, was scarcely a step in advance . The libretto was founded on
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Sir Walter Scott's novel, but the opera lacks unity of style, and its pages are marred by concessions to the vocalist . One number has survived, the characteristic Bohemian dance which has been interpolated into the fourth act of Carmen . In his third opera Bizet returned to an
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oriental subject . Djamileh, a one-act opera. given at the Opera Comique on the 22nd of May 1872, is certainly one of his most individual efforts . Again were accusations of Wagnerism hurled at the composer's head, and Djamileh did not achieve the success it undoubtedly deserved . The composer was more fortunate with the incidental music he wrote to Alphonse Daudet's drama, L'Arlesienne, produced in October 1872 . Different numbers from this, arranged in the form of suites, have often been heard in the concert-
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room . Rarely have
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poetry and imagination been so well allied as in these exquisite pages, which seem to reflect the sunny skies of Provence .

Bizet's masterpiece, Carmen, was brought out at the Opera Comique on the 3rd of

March 187 5 . It was based on a version by Meilhac and Halevy of a study by Prosper Merimee—in which the dramatic element was obscured by much descriptive writing . The detection of the drama underlying this psychological narrative was in itself a brilliant
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discovery, and in reconstructing the story in dramatic form the authors produced one of the most famous libretti in the whole range of opera . Still more striking, than the libretto was the music composed by Bizet, in which the
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peculiar use of the
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flute and of the lowest notes of the harp deserves particular attention . On the 3rd of June; three months after the production of Carmen in Paris, the genial composer expired after a few hours' illness from a heart affection . Before dying he had the satisfaction of knowing that Carmen had been accepted for production at Vienna . After the
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Austrian capital came Brussels, Berlin and, in 1878,
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London, when Carmen was brought out at Her Majesty's theatre with immense success . The influence exercised by Bizet on dramatic music has been very
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great, and may be discerned in the realistic
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works of the young
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Italian school, as well as in those of his own countrymen .

End of Article: BIZET EALEXANDRE CESAR
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