Chabrier had great difficulty in finding a convincing ending to the piece, even trying to get Lamoureux to help him. In the end though he was pleased with this work; in a letter to his publishers Enoch et Costallat he wrote "I am very attached to this work. It is difficult but will be less so in ten or twenty years from now".
According to Myers, the work has a glowing intensity and sensuous aura, and the writing for voices and instruments is free and uninhibited, enlivened by harmonic subtleties and bold and original modulations. Charles Lecocq, checking the publisher's proofs, wrote jokingly to Chabrier of how amazing (épatant) the orchestration was, but also how complicated it was "for a simple musician like him".Chabrier E. Correspondance. Ed Delage R, Durif F. Klincksieck, 1994. 92-45n2, p1056; letter from Lecocq to Chabrier dated 5 April 1892.
Debussy confided to the critic and composer Gustave Samazeuilh that he was influenced by La Sulamite when writing La Damoiselle élue. Ravel was also an enthusiast, introducing the work to his friend Ricardo Viñes in 1897.
La Sulamite is scored for a large orchestra of piccolo, 2 flutes, oboe, cor anglais, 2 B flat clarinets, bass clarinet, 4 bassoons; 2 horns in F, 2 horns in E flat, 2 pistons in C, 2 trumpets in F, 3 trombones, tuba; timpani, antique cymbals in E flat, triangle, drum, bass drum, cymbals; 2 harps, violins, violas, cellos and double basses. The work lasts around 17 minutes.
|
|