composer

Claude Debussy

August 22, 1862 - Saint-Germain-en-Laye (France) — March 25, 1918 - Paris (France)

© Paul Nadar (1905)

About

More than a century after his death, Claude Debussy remains perhaps the best-known of all French composers. His fastidious approach to orchestral color, embrace of formal ambiguity, and innovative use of Eastern whole-tone and pentatonic scales made him a famous and controversial figure in his own lifetime. His most popular works include the wistful “Clair de lune” and the Two Arabesques for piano, the epoch-making Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune, the opera Pelléas et Mélisande, and the evocative “symphonic sketches” of La mer.. A truly cosmopolitan creator, he borrowed freely from other artforms including Impressionist painting and Symbolist poetry. At a time when Romantic music seemed to have exhausted itself, Debussy “breathed new air into the art of music.”

Videos to (re)discover

Loading...