Nuages gris

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File:NuagesGrisOpening.PNG
The first two bars present the quartal harmony used in this piece.

Nuages gris (pronounced: [nɥaːʒ ɡʁi]; French, lit. Grey Clouds), S.199 or Trübe Wolken, is a work for piano solo composed by Franz Liszt on August 24, 1881. It is one of Liszt's most haunting and at the same time one of his most experimental works, representing, according to Allen Forte, "a high point in the experimental idiom with respect to expressive compositional procedure."'[1] If we must look for biographical parallels with the music, perhaps the bleakness of mood is connected with difficulties faced by Liszt at the time of composition, when he was suffering from dropsy, failing eyesight, and severe injuries sustained in a fall down the stairs of the Hofgärtnerei seven weeks earlier.[2]

Departing from his earlier virtuoso style, Liszt in his later years made several radical, compositional experiments, including Nuages gris, Unstern S.208 and Bagatelle sans tonalité S.216. Yet it was only in the second half of the twentieth century that the significance of Liszt's late experimental works began to be appreciated. R. Larry Todd, for example, has noted that "Arguably, Liszt was the first composer to establish the augmented triad as a truly independent sonority, to consider its implications for modem dissonance treatment, and to ponder its meaning for the future course of tonality. Liszt's accomplishments in these areas were considerable and support in no small way his position, in Busoni's phrase, as the 'master of freedom.'[3] Scholars such as Humphrey Searle, Zoltán Harsányi, Bence Szabolcsi, Lajos Bárdos, and István Szelényi have contributed much to placing these works in the repertoire of today's pianists.[4]

Nuages gris is quite short and technically simple. According to Jim Samson, "the most distinctive features of Liszt's late style are present in this short work—the avoidance of a conventional cadential structure, the importance of semitonal movement, the use of the augmented triad as the central harmonic unit and of parallelism as a principal means of progression."[5] The harmonies are based on augmented triads while the melody line makes extensive reference to the hungarian minor scale. The harmonies, which are very different from those found in his earlier works, give a very dark and almost morbid feel to the piece. Leonard Ratner has commented: "The restless, unresolved dissonances of Nuages gris the isolated figures, the sense of alienation—these have a clear affinity with the somewhat later expressionism of the Viennese composers Mahler and Schoenberg.... [Nuages gris] is a musical bellwether that indicated what was happening and what would happen in European music: sound, with the assistance of symmetry, would take over, harmony would be absorbed into color and lose its cadential function."[6]

Claude Debussy probably had Nuages gris in mind when he composed his own Nuages.[7] Mauricio Kagel used Nuages gris in his Unguis incarnatus est (1972).[8] in 1986, Heinz Holliger worked the piece out into Zwei Liszt-Transkriptionen for orchestra (together with Unstern!).[9] A shocking scene at the morgue in Stanley Kubrick's last film Eyes Wide Shut is accompanied by Nuages gris.

References

  1. Arnold, Ben, ed., The Liszt Companion, Greenwood Publishing Group, 2002, p. 169.
  2. Arnold, The Liszt Companion, p. 169.
  3. Arnold, The Liszt Companion, p. 140.
  4. Arnold, The Liszt Companion, p. 26.
  5. Samson, Jim, Music in Transition, New York, 1977, p. 17.
  6. Arnold, The Liszt Companion, p. 169.
  7. Palmer, Christopher, Impressionism in music, Volume 1973, Part 1, p. 58.
  8. Decarsin, François. 1985. "Liszt’s Nuages gris and Kagel’s Unguis incarnatus est: A Model and Its Issue", translated by Jonathan Dunsby. Music Analysis 4, no. 3:259–63.
  9. Stefan Drees, Transkription versus Übermalung. Zu Heinz Holligers und Peter Ruzickas kreativer Auseinandersetzung mit den späten Klavierstücken Franz Liszts. In: Neue Zeitschrift für Musik, Schott, Mainz 04/2014, p. 44.

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