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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.”
Early years and education
Family background
Achille-Claude Debussy was born in August 1862 in Saint-Germain-en-Laye, a western suburb of Paris. Born to working-class parents, he was the eldest of five children. His father, an unsuccessful businessman, had served seven years in the marine infantry. The family moved to Paris when Claude was a young boy, where they remained until the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War in 1870. To escape the Siege of Paris, they fled to the seaside town of Cannes. Here Debussy had piano lessons with an Italian musician named Jean Cerutti. Soon after, he studied piano with Antoinette Mauté, who claimed to be a pupil of Frédéric Chopin. She was also the mother-in-law of poet Paul Verlaine; Verlaine and other Symbolist writers would become a major influence on Debussy’s music.
Education at the Conservatoire de Paris
Though none of his family were artistic, Debussy displayed an immediate gift for music. At the age of ten, he gained admittance to the Paris Conservatoire. He continued piano studies with Antoine Marmontel for piano; other teachers included Émile Durand for harmony and César Franck for organ. Despite his talent, Debussy was a lax student and failed to advance to the Conservatoire’s upper-level piano courses. Around that time he composed his first works, a set of songs with piano accompaniment.
In 1880, he was engaged by the eccentric Russian businesswoman Nadezhda von Meck to teach her children piano and to play duets with her. Debussy spent three summers traveling across Europe with her family. Von Meck was also the friend and patroness of Russian composer Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky. Their relationship, which lasted more than a decade, came with the unusual stipulation that the two never meet.
He was taken under the wing of influential composer Charles Gounod. Debussy wrote fondly of his early mentor, saying, “the art of Gounod represents a moment in French sensibility. Whether one wants to or not, that kind of thing is not forgotten.”
Winning the Prix de Rome
Debussy won the Prix de Rome in 1884. This prestigious award included a stipend to study in Rome; past winners included Hector Berlioz, Gounod, and Bizet. Two decades later, a national scandal erupted when his colleague and occasional rival Maurice Ravel failed to win the competition.
The Prix de Rome stipulated that recipients regularly submit compositions to demonstrate their progress. Debussy’s pieces weren’t always well received: “He is an enigma,” Jules Massenet responded to one. Debussy disliked Italian opera, though he deeply admired the polyphonic choral music of the late Renaissance masters Lasso and Palestrina. He enjoyed the company of painters and spent hours playing through the score of Richard Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde. While in Rome, he wrote of his desire to break away from the dictates of the musically conservative Conservatoire. “I am too enamored of my freedom,” he declared, “too fond of my own ideas!”
Debussy: explorer of sound
Early influences: some kept, others cast aside
Debussy’s early musical influences came from his first piano lessons and his time at the Conservatoire. His teachers introduced pillars of the canon including Bach, Mozart, and Beethoven. Antoinette Mauté instilled in him a lifelong appreciation for Chopin that manifested most profoundly in his final collection of piano works, the Douze Études.
One of Debussy’s strongest early influences, and one whom he would later renounce, was Richard Wagner. Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde, with its intense outpouring of emotion and its groundbreaking harmonies, created shockwaves when it premiered in 1865 (Leonard Bernstein called it the “central work of all music history”). As a young man, Debussy won a bet to perform the entirety of the score from memory and made two pilgrimages to Wagner’s opera house at Bayreuth. Yet within a few years he had forcefully rejected the German’s stylistic innovations. Noting Wagner’s intrusive influence on Pelléas et Mélisande, he “tore everything up and struck out searching for a new chemistry of more personal phrases.” A decade later, he declared Wagnerism “a beautiful sunset that was mistaken for a dawn.”
Eastern influences
Debussy retained more of the techniques he acquired from the Russian masters. Through his association with von Meck, he obtained the scores of Russian composers during a trip to Moscow. He was particularly influenced by members of the quintet known as the Mighty Handful, particularly Alexander Borodin, Modest Mussorgsky (whose Boris Godunov influenced Pelléas), and Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov. From these composers Debussy absorbed the use of medieval modes, Eastern scales, and an Impressionist approach to orchestration. In 1889, he attended the Exposition Universelle in Paris, where he heard Rimsky-Korsakov conduct Russian music.
While at the Exposition, Debussy also heard performances by a Javanese gamelan orchestra. Their rich variety of percussive instruments, complex polyphony, and use of whole-tone and pentatonic scales were a revelation. Afterward, he wrote that the ensemble made Western harmonies sound like “empty phantoms of use to clever little children.” His use of these scales was wide-reaching, as was his mimicking of the percussive strokes of the gamelan’s gongs and xylophones: the second movement of his String Quartet [53:30] abounds with flurries of plucked strings.
Extra-musical influences
Fin de sieclè Paris provided Debussy with a wealth of inspiration. The fluid structures and ambiguous verses of Symbolist poetry inspired flexibility in his early works, including Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune. Paul Dukas, most known for his symphonic poem The Sorcerer’s Apprentice, wrote, “the strongest influence to which Debussy submitted was that of the littérateurs, not that of the musician.” Edgar Allan Poe, revered in France thanks to the translations of Charles Baudelaire, also inspired Debussy (as well as Ravel). Debussy began two operas based on Poe short stories, though he completed neither.
The world of the visual arts also proved stimulating. “I love pictures almost as much as music,” he told Edgard Varèse. He counted among his friends some of the great Parisian artists such as the sculptor Camille Claudel, who gifted him a small version of La valse. He gave many of his works descriptive titles befitting painting (Images, Arabesques, and Nuages, to name a few). Critics compared him to artists including the Symbolist Gustav Klimt and Claude Monet.
Was Debussy an Impressionist?
“Impressionism” has been a controversial term since its inception. Soon after Monet debuted his painting Impression, Sunrise in 1872, critics began using the term as a slur, applying it to music from this period. The term was first used to describe Debussy’s music while he was studying in Rome. A reviewer at the Academy, reacting to his symphonic suite Printemps, wrote, “One recognizes in his case a feeling for musical color, the exaggeration of which makes him too easily forget the importance of precision of design and form. It is strongly desired that he guard against this vague ‘impressionism’ that is one of the most dangerous enemies of truth in works of art.”
Debussy’s feelings toward the term vacillated. The program note for a performance of La mer that Debussy conducted claimed, “It is, in a word, musical impressionism, following an exotic and refined art,” yet that same year Debussy angrily wrote: “I’m attempting something different, realities in some sense—what imbeciles call impressionism, just about the least appropriate term possible.” To complicate matters still further, he considered it an honor to be called “a pupil of Claude Monet.”
As biographer Roy Howat notes, “Like Fauré, Debussy often juxtaposes the same basic material in different modes or with a strategically shifted bass – arguably his most literal approach to true Impressionist technique, the equivalent of Monet’s fixed object (be it cathedral or haystack) illuminated from different angles.” His ambiguous, often directionless harmonies imply rather than proclaim, and his obsessive approach to orchestral color mirrored that of the artists’ palette. He incorporated, among other techniques, harp harmonics, muted cymbals, and wordless choruses (a trick Ravel borrowed for Daphnis et Chlöé). Pieces such as Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune emphasize the distinct timbres produced by individual instruments rather than entire sections.
When Debussy spoke of music, he often used visual descriptions. Timbres were described in relation to color relationships. He advised a student to “Collect impressions. Don’t be in a hurry to write them down. Because that’s something music can do better than painting: it can centralise variations of color and light within a single picture—a truth generally ignored, obvious as it is.”
Debussy’s Works: A Revolution in Sound
Prélude à l'après-midi d'un faune
Debussy completed the landmark Prélude à l'après-midi d'un faune in 1894. He was inspired by L'après-midi d'un faune, a poem by his friend Stéphane Mallarmé. The poem tells of an amorous faun who, awakening from a nap in the forest, reflects on a passionate encounter—real or imagined, he does not know—with a pair of nymphs.
For Mallarmé, the goal of poetry was “to depict not the thing but the effect it produces.” Similarly, Debussy’s Prélude is not a tone poem in the Lisztian or Straussian sense: instead of recounting a clear narrative, the music evokes the mood of the story. The piece opens with a sinuous flute solo, a nod to the Greek god Pan’s syrinx. Whole-tone scales, dissonant tritones, and slow, free-flowing melodies create a dream-like atmosphere.
The fluid ambiguity of the Prélude sparked a quiet musical revolution. In direct contradiction to the directional processes exemplified by Beethoven, this music delights in languorous stillness. It is no small wonder that conductor Pierre Boulez, a champion of Debussy’s, said, “The flute of Debussy’s Faune breathed new air into the art of music.”
Pelléas et Mélisande
Following the 1902 premiere of Pelléas et Mélisande, his sole completed opera, Debussy reflected, “For a long time I had been striving to write music for the theatre, but the form in which I wanted it to be was so unusual that after several attempts I had given up on the idea.” His search for the ideal libretto had begun nearly two decades earlier. He consulted numerous texts and found none that suited him until reading a copy of Maurice Maeterlinck’s Symbolist play Pelléas et Mélisande. After attending its premiere, he approached Maeterlinck for permission to set the text to music.
The opera opens with the widowed Golaud lost in a forest. He stumbles upon a weeping girl, Mélisande, who agrees to return to Golaud’s castle. Though the pair wed, she falls in love with his brother, Pelléas. When Golaud discovers them, he murders his brother and chases after his pregnant wife. Soon after, she gives birth and dies. By conventional standards, little action occurs within this plot structure, and audiences were taken aback by the almost total absence of set pieces and arias. “Too much singing and the musical settings are too cumbersome,” Debussy complained of Pelléas’s predecessors. He instead emphasized what he described as “the long-pursued expression of the feelings of the soul.”
Debussy’s music is equally expressive. Much of the score defies the common practice system of tonality, with whole tone scales and harmonic progressions that float aimlessly. Medieval modal melodies heighten the mysterious sense of existing out of time. In defiance of the massive ensemble Wagner had assembled at Bayreuth, Debussy uses the orchestra to subtler effect: though omnipresent, it underscores the drama rather than overwhelming it. Publicly, he disavowed Wagner’s influence but privately admitted to borrowing his use of leitmotif.
Initial reception was mixed. Anti-modernists disliked it; Camille Saint-Saëns, doyen of the reactionary old guard, was particularly harsh toward Debussy. One reviewer compared the music to the discordant sounds of a squeaking door. Younger, more progressive attendees and members of the avant-garde found the work miraculous. Maurice Ravel, then a frustrated Conservatoire student at odds with his stuffy professors, attended every performance.
Pelléas made Debussy famous. Within the decade it had premiered across Europe and the United States. By 1913 the Opera-Comique had given the work its hundredth performance. Debussy’s influence within France widened a schism between his supporters and detractors, who hurled accusations of “debussysme” at works they deemed too modern.
La Mer
With 1905’s La Mer, Debussy sailed into uncharted musical waters. He called the movements “symphonic sketches,” setting them outside the German traditions of both the symphony and the programmatic tone poem. The movements eschew formal structure, violate conventional rules of harmony, and avoid thematic development. Individual instrumental lines are given unprecedented levels of freedom, allowing for a greater variety of tone colors. When the score to La mer was printed, he insisted that Hokusai’s The Great Wave off Kanagawa grace the cover.
Initial reception was poor, with critics on both sides of the Atlantic (one suggested renaming it “Mal de Mer”). A reviewer for Le temps quipped, “I do not hear, I do not see, I do not smell the sea.” Even Debussy was somewhat irreverent toward the work, writing that the sea “is beautiful, far more beautiful than La Mer of a certain C. D.”
Suite bergamasque
Though Debussy began composing the Suite bergamasque as early as the late 1880s, it remained unpublished for more than fifteen years. By 1905, the year his publisher released it, Debussy had turned away from large-scale works like La mer and Pelléas et Mélisande to focus on smaller chamber works. This was a tumultuous period in Debussy’s personal life. His affair with the singer Emma Bardac, mother of one of his piano students, caused a scandal among Parisian high society. To make matters worse, Debussy’s wife Lily attempted suicide; many of their friends sided with her. Embroiled in divorce proceedings, he may have agreed to publish the Suite to help pay for them.
The title comes from Paul Verlaine’s 1869 poem “Clair de lune.” Debussy set Verlaine’s poetry to music more often than that of any other poet: Nearly a quarter of his roughly eighty songs use Verlaine’s poems, including the song cycle Ariettes oubliées. He even carried around a book of Verlaine’s poetry. Two of the movements, the Menuet and Passepied, are named after Baroque French court dances. Like other French composers of his era, Debussy looked to the old French masters to forge a contemporary musical identity.
“Clair de lune,” Debussy’s most enduring composition and one of the most famous of all piano pieces, needs little introduction. Its melody is shimmering moonbeams made sound, gossamer threads of silver hanging above the dark waters of the Seine. Debussy took direct inspiration from Verlaine’s poem, which tells of buffoons singing happy words in minor keys:
And their song mingles with the moonlight,
With the sad and beautiful moonlight,
Which makes the birds in the trees dream
And sob with ecstasy the water streams,
The great slim water streams among the marble statues.
Douze Études
Diagnosed with rectal cancer in 1909, Debussy spent his final decade in protracted physical decline. After undergoing a colostomy—then a novel procedure—he spent his remaining years in excruciating pain. The onset of the First World War instigated further creative and existential crises. “I’m nothing more than a wretched atom hurled around by this terrible cataclysm,” he wrote days after France began mobilization. He spent the summer of 1915 in a villa in Normandy. Though barely seventy miles from the Western Front, Debussy found the creative energy to complete several works including the Douze Études for piano. “I’ve been writing like a madman,” he wrote, “or like a man condemned to die the next morning.”
The Études were Debussy’s final collection of piano pieces before succumbing to cancer in 1918. They bear the dedication “to the memory of Frédéric Chopin,” whose own études were a model of pedagogy elevated to fine art. Debussy, who held little affection for pianists, delighted in the set’s fiendish difficulty. They contain, he joked, “a thousand ways of treating pianists as they deserve,” including a Lisztian mastery of octaves and tricky chromatic passages.
Jeux
Debussy completed the score for Jeux [59:41], his sole ballet, at the behest of Ballets Russes impresario Serge Diaghilev and choreographer Vaslav Nijinsky. The scenario of this poème dansé concerns a young man and two girls in a garden at dusk. The trio plays hide and seek while searching for a lost tennis ball before disappearing into the darkest reaches of the garden.
The score captures both the mysteries of the night and the erotic charge between the trio of dancers. Slow, atmospheric passages alternate with sections thrumming with playful energy. Debussy eschews melodic repetition in favor of short, protean gestures. This masterpiece illustrates the composer’s precise approach to orchestral color: in one moment, woodwind soloists volley melodic fragments; in another, Debussy contrasts the percussive sounds of xylophone, violin pizzicato, and flute trills.
Jeux remains an overlooked masterpiece. The ambiguousness of its form has left audiences and musicians unsure of how to approach the piece; as a result, orchestras default to Debussy’s more accessible works. Jeux also had the misfortune of premiering at the Théâtre du Châtelet in Paris on May 15, 1913. Two weeks later, it was upstaged by the opening of the groundbreaking The Rite of Spring by Igor Stravinsky.
Debussy's influence on classical music
By the time he died at the age of fifty-five, he had become France’s leading composer. To this day, he remains the most popular French composer of the twentieth century, if not of all time. Ravel reflected that his colleague was “the most phenomenal genius in the history of French music…. one of great individuality, creating its own laws, constantly in evolution, expressing itself freely, yet always faithful to French tradition.” In France and abroad, Ravel was unofficially declared his immediate successor. Yet Debussy’s influence upon his contemporaries, future generations of musicians, and culture writ large continued to grow. French composers including Henri Dutilleux, Olivier Messiaen, and Boulez were all indebted to his style, as were international composers including Aaron Copland, Benjamin Britten and Béla Bartók (Bartók, along with his Hungarian compatriot Zoltán Kodály, found similarities to Hungarian folk music in Debussy’s use of pentatonic scales). Even those who viewed him as a dated establishment figure situated themselves in opposition to his style. Following his death, avant-garde polymath Jean Cocteau sneered, “Enough of nuages, waves, aquariums, ondines and nocturnal perfumes,” an overt nod to titles of Debussy’s works.
He had few students, preferring to focus on composing ahead of teaching. As a pedagogue, Debussy’s legacy lies with those whom he coached. Pianists including George Copeland, Marcelle Meyer, and Marius-François Gaillard performed his works in the years after his death, preserving his impressionistic approach.
Pelléas et Mélisande had a lasting effect on the development of opera. Rather than collaborate with a librettist, Debussy crafted his own libretto from Maeterlinck’s play. Later composers, including Richard Strauss (Salome) and Alban Berg (Wozzeck), edited their libretti from existing source material. Leoš Janáček studied Debussy’s naturalistic text setting, which closely mirrored the rhythms of French speech, when crafting his operas. Francis Poulenc, perhaps the pre-eminent French composer for the voice in the twentieth century, acknowledged Debussy’s influence on his opera Dialogues des Carmélites.
Debussy’s influence on jazz illustrates the fruitful cross-pollination that took place across the Atlantic. Several of his works assimilate African American genres such as ragtime, jazz, and blues; jazz musicians, in turn, borrowed his approach to harmony (his use of the acoustic scale, with its approximation of flattened “blue” notes, proved especially amenable). Duke Ellington learned much from studying Debussy’s scores, including La mer.
Perhaps most importantly, Debussy helped free Western composers from more than a century of Austro-German cultural dominance. His friend Erik Satie, bemoaning Wagner’s influence, said that French composers needed their own music—“without sauerkraut if possible.” Debussy’s music widened a path away from the Beethovenian approach to formal development. While he is most known for a short piece about moonlight, Debussy was much more than a composer of wistful salon music; he was at the very vanguard of musical modernism.
Claude Debussy: timeline of key dates
- 1862: Claude Debussy is born in Saint-Germain-en-Laye in the western suburbs of Paris.1864: Richard Strauss is born.1865: Jean Sibelius is born. Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde premieres. United States President Abraham Lincoln is assassinated in the final weeks of the American Civil War.
- 1866: Ferruccio Busoni and Erik Satie are born.
- 1869: Hector Berlioz dies.
- 1870: During the Franco-Prussian War, the Debussy family flees the Siege of Paris for Cannes; there Debussy has his first piano lessons.
- 1872: Debussy enters the Paris Conservatoire at the age of ten.
- 1874: Charles Ives and Arnold Schoenberg are born. Monet’s Impression, Sunrise, credited with inspiring the name of the Impressionist movement, exhibited in Paris. Saint-Saëns’ La danse macabre premieres.
- 1875: Maurice Ravel is born. Georges Bizet dies three months after the premiere of his magnum opus, the opera Carmen.
- 1880: Nadezhda von Meck, the patroness of Tchaikovsky, engages Debussy as pianist; he spends the next three summers traveling with her and her family.
- 1881: Pablo Picasso is born.
- 1883: Richard Wagner dies.
- 1884: Debussy wins the Prix de Rome with his cantata L’enfant prodigue.
- 1886: Franz Liszt dies.
- 1889: Debussy and Maurice Ravel see Rimsky-Korsakov conduct an all-Russian program at the Paris Exposition Universelle. They hear Javanese gamelan music at this same festival; these compositions and styles influence their future works. Eiffel Tower completed.
- 1893: String Quartet premieres. Charles Gounod and Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky die.
- 1894: Premiere of Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune.
- 1895: First commercial presentation of moving pictures by Lumière brothers.
- 1899: Debussy marries Lilly Texier.
- 1902: Premiere of Debussy’s landmark opera Pelléas et Mélisande. Ricardo Viñes premieres Ravel’s Jeux d’eau.
- 1903: Appointed Chevalier of the Légion d'honneur.
- 1904: Debussy begins an affair with Emma Bardac, the mother of one of his students and the former mistress and muse of Gabriel Fauré. Debussy’s wife Lilly attempts suicide later that year, causing a scandal.
- 1905: La Mer premieres to mixed reception at the Concerts Colonne. Publication of the Suite bergamasque, which includes “Clair de lune.” Emma Bardac gives birth to their daughter, Claude-Emma.
- 1908: Debussy and Emma Bardac marry. Premiere of Ravel’s Rapsodie espagnole for orchestra. Ravel completes Gaspard de la nuit for solo piano. Charles Ives composes The Unanswered Question. Olivier Messiaen is born. Conductor Herbert von Karajan is born. Pablo de Sarasate dies. Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov dies.
- 1909: Appointed member of the advisory board of the Conservatoire. Diagnosed with colon cancer.
- 1910: Stravinsky’s ballet The Firebird premieres at the Palais Garnier; Debussy is in attendance and meets the composer.
- 1912: Premiere of Ravel’s ballet Daphnis et Chloé. Premiere of Arnold Schoenberg’s melodrama Pierrot lunaire. Sinking of the RMS Titanic in the North Atlantic Ocean.
- 1913: Premiere of Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring.
- 1914: The assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo on 28 June precipitates the First World War, which begins one month later.
- 1915: Debussy undergoes a colostomy procedure to treat his cancer.
- 1917: Composition and premiere of the Sonata for Piano and Violin. This is Debussy’s last major composition and his final public performance.
- 1918: Debussy dies of colon cancer, age 55. World War I ends on 11 November with the signing of the Armistice.
