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Erik Satie
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Erik Satie's (1866-1925) music appeals to wide audiences and has influenced both experimental artists and pop musicians. Little about Satie was conventional, and he resists classification under easy headings such as 'classical music'. Instead of pursuing the path of a professional composer, Satie initially earned a living as a caf� pianist and moved in bohemian circles which prized satire, popularculture and experiment. Small wonder that his music is fundamentally new in conception. It is music which is not always designed to be listened to attentively: music which can be machine-like but isto be played by humans. For Satie, music was part of a wider concept of artistic creation, as evidenced by his collaborations with leading avant-garde artists and in works which cross traditional genre boundaries such as his texted piano pieces. His music was created in some of the most exciting and creatively stimulating environments of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century: Montmartreand Montparnasse. Paris was the artistic centre of Europe, and Satie was a notorious figure whose music and ideas are inextricably linked with the City of Light. This book situates Satie's work withinthe context and sonic environment of contemporary Paris. It shows that the influence of street music, musicians and poets interested in new technology, contemporary innovations and radical politics are all crucial to an understanding of Satie. Music from the ever-popular <I>Gymnopédies</I> to newly discovered works are discussed, and an online supplement features rare pieces recorded especially for the book.<BR><BR> CAROLINE POTTER is Reader in Music at Kingston University London. A graduate in both French and Music, she has published widely on French music since Debussy and was Series Advisor to the Philharmonia Orchestra's Paris 2014-15 season.
Title: Erik Satie
Description:
Erik Satie's (1866-1925) music appeals to wide audiences and has influenced both experimental artists and pop musicians.
Little about Satie was conventional, and he resists classification under easy headings such as 'classical music'.
Instead of pursuing the path of a professional composer, Satie initially earned a living as a caf� pianist and moved in bohemian circles which prized satire, popularculture and experiment.
Small wonder that his music is fundamentally new in conception.
It is music which is not always designed to be listened to attentively: music which can be machine-like but isto be played by humans.
For Satie, music was part of a wider concept of artistic creation, as evidenced by his collaborations with leading avant-garde artists and in works which cross traditional genre boundaries such as his texted piano pieces.
His music was created in some of the most exciting and creatively stimulating environments of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century: Montmartreand Montparnasse.
Paris was the artistic centre of Europe, and Satie was a notorious figure whose music and ideas are inextricably linked with the City of Light.
This book situates Satie's work withinthe context and sonic environment of contemporary Paris.
It shows that the influence of street music, musicians and poets interested in new technology, contemporary innovations and radical politics are all crucial to an understanding of Satie.
Music from the ever-popular <I>Gymnopédies</I> to newly discovered works are discussed, and an online supplement features rare pieces recorded especially for the book.
<BR><BR> CAROLINE POTTER is Reader in Music at Kingston University London.
A graduate in both French and Music, she has published widely on French music since Debussy and was Series Advisor to the Philharmonia Orchestra's Paris 2014-15 season.
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The Musical Activities of Alfred Satie and Eugénie Satie-Barnetche, and Their Effect on the Career of Erik Satie
The Musical Activities of Alfred Satie and Eugénie Satie-Barnetche, and Their Effect on the Career of Erik Satie
Erik Satie is now thought of as a precursor and a man of ideas whose unconventional career took its direction from his continual rethinking of every aspect of contemporary music an...
Truth in Art, and Erik Satie's Judgement
Truth in Art, and Erik Satie's Judgement
AbstractIt is certainly true that Satie, in his later years, did not tire of repeating that there is ‘no Truth in Art’; and in saying so, he was doubtless very much in tune with th...
Erik Satie – the ‘progenitor’ of muzak or the precursor of ‘pipedown’ movement? On the concept of musique d’ameublement
Erik Satie – the ‘progenitor’ of muzak or the precursor of ‘pipedown’ movement? On the concept of musique d’ameublement
Erik Satie (1866–1925) was a colourful and intriguing artist in the world of Parisian avant-garde. In the turbulent times of the early 20th century he created the concept of musiqu...
Satie, Erik Alfred Leslie (1866–1925)
Satie, Erik Alfred Leslie (1866–1925)
Erik Satie’s compositions, writings, and humor played an important role in many modernist movements of the twentieth century. Experimenting with simple forms, neoclassicism, mystic...
Erik Satie – a psychopathological approach
Erik Satie – a psychopathological approach
IntroductionÉric Satie was a French classical music composer born in May of 1866. He composed several music pieces that did not fit the contemporaneous musical standard once he did...
Modernism, Neoclassicism, and Irony
Modernism, Neoclassicism, and Irony
This chapter discusses the relation between neoclassicism and modernism. It sets Satie’s ‘Symphonic Drama’ on texts of Plato, Socrate, in the context of post-First World War neocla...
On Making a New Realization of Uspud by Erik Satie and J. P. Contamine de Latour
On Making a New Realization of Uspud by Erik Satie and J. P. Contamine de Latour
AbstractThis essay reflects on a new digital realization by Andrew Hugill of the ‘Christian ballet’ Uspud (1892) by Erik Satie and J. P. Contamine de Latour. The creative process o...
Triple Entendre
Triple Entendre
This book discusses the rise and spread of background music in contexts as diverse as office workplaces, shopping malls, and musical performance. The book examines background music...

