Last night was fête de
la musique in Paris. This is one of
the most delightful and imaginative of the many ways in which Paris celebrates
itself and uses its public spaces.
Started in 1982 by Minister of Culture Jack Lang, and now imitated in
hundreds of cities around the world, fête
de la musique is a people’s music festival that brings hundreds of thousands
of Parisians into the streets on June 21st, the first night of summer.
Everyone is invited to perform. Grunge bands set up on street corners and in
squares, hook to a power source, and blast their music for milling crowds. String quartets play Beethoven in the toney
Place des Vosges. Solitary violinists or
oboists gather tiny bands of admiring listeners on side streets. World famous orchestras and vocal ensembles
perform in Paris’ premier concert spaces.
And everything is free.
In past years, Susie and I have simply wandered down to the
river and joined the strolling families and couples moving from group to group,
spending as much time watching the other strollers as listening to the music,
but this year we decided to try to get into one of the premier events, a
concert by the world-famous early music group The Tallis Singers. The concert was listed in the indispensable PariScope
as taking place at 2030 hrs [i.e., 8:30 p.m.] in the Musée d’Orsay.
The Musée d’Orsay
began life in 1900 as the Gare d’Orsay,
one of Paris’ huge, ornate train stations.
In 1986, after a complete make-over, it reopened with the largest
collection of Impressionist and Post-Impressionist artworks in the world. Train stations tend to be vast, cavernous
spaces, and the Gare d’Orsay was no
exception. Located on the Left Bank
quais just opposite the point on the Right Bank at which the Louvre ends and
the Jardin des Tuileries begins, the
station stretches for a long block east to west. The renovated museum preserves the enormous
open interior space as a “nave” [as though it were a cathedral], surrounded by
galleries on four levels. The museum
contains an auditorium where Susie and I recently attended a [paying] concert,
and the inevitable restaurant.
Despite arriving almost an hour early, we found ourselves
pretty far back on the line waiting outside the museum. When the doors were opened, even though the
concert was free, a select group of special guests was let in first. Not even Paris’ socialist mayor can overcome
the French obsession with social class.
The concert was held in the nave, and les invités[O1] [O2]
immediately occupied the chairs that had been set up close to the impromptu
stage, leaving the rest of us to grab spots on the marble benches lining the nave
or simply to sit on the floor. Susie and
I bagged two of the last free spots on the benches, and watched as hundreds
upon hundreds of people poured in, creating a pretty tight jam. Considering that the concert featured
Palestrina and Allegri, it is astonishing that many of the people in the
audience were young. When Susie and I used
to attend the wonderful early music concerts of Aston Magna in Great Barrington
each summer, we would joke that our presence was lowering the average age of
the audience.
Shortly before 2030, when people were still milling about,
Susie caught sight of Pierre Bourhis, a tall, striking baritone whom we have
heard and enjoyed countless times in concerts of medieval music at the Cluny, le Musée du Moyen Âge, several blocks
from our apartment. It turned out he was
looking for the two ladies sitting next to us on the stone bench, and when he approached,
I called his name and thanked him for the lovely concerts we had heard [in
French, I might add.] He seemed pleased.
The concert, which lasted for about seventy-five minutes
without intermission, was of course simply splendid, and despite the discomfort
of the unyielding marble benches, I spent a rapturous hour and fifteen
minutes. The high point, and one of the
truly magical moments in my concert-going experience, came not in one of the
Palestrina offerings, but in the Miserere
by Gregorio Allegri, a composer of whom I had never heard. Four times during the brief twelve minute
piece, a lone soprano voice soared higher and higher above the rich tapestry of
sound created by the other nine singers until it seemed to detach itself from
any actual person and swell, pure, full, completely without vibrato, filling
the vast space of the Musée d’Orsay. I am familiar with the arguments for the
existence of God and their refutations, and I can say definitively that none of
them, even tweaked by Alvin Plantenga, can hold a candle to that divine sound.
Afterward, we went back to our Place Maubert café and ate
Berthillon cassis sorbet while two rock bands competed in different corners of the
Place. Republican proponents of “freedom
fries” to the contrary notwithstanding, the French have some things they can
teach us about what it is to be a society.
This is off topic, but I just read your eminently readable Rhetoric of Deterrence and enjoyed it immensely.
ReplyDeleteIt immediately made me think of the following scene from the wonderful British television series Yes Minister:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IX_d_vMKswE
By the way, why was this book not published?
Also, I am almost certain that the model for the "Austrian scientist" in this part of Yes Minister is the LSE's own Karl Popper.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for the link, Bjorn. It was delightful!
ReplyDeleteI sent the book to Harvard, which had just accepted KANT'S THEORY OF MENTAL ACTIVITY. They said it was too political. I sent it to a commercial publisher. They said it was too scholarly. I sent it to Noam Chomsky, whom I knew from Harvard. He said it ought to be published. So I moved on and forgot about it. Oh well. I could have been Assistant Deputy Under Secretary for NotSoFast.
It was fun to write, though.
You are probably right about Popper!
Ah, yes the Allegri Miserere — it's quite a stunning piece and there's a good story about it.
ReplyDeleteThe piece was written in the 1630s for use at the Vatican, where Allegri was employed. It had a considerable reputation in its own time, but there were very few copies of the composition circulating until Mozart, then 14 and visiting Rome, heard the piece and wrote it down from memory afterwards. He subsequently gave a copy to Charles Burney, who arranged for publication.
The Wikipedia reproduces Leopold Mozart's letter to his wife describing this bit of 18th century musical piracy:
"You have often heard of the famous Miserere in Rome, which is so greatly prized that the performers in the chapel are forbidden on pain of excommunication to take away a single part of it, to copy it or to give it to anyone. But we have it already. Wolfgang has written it down and we would have sent it to Salzburg in this letter, if it were not necessary for us to be there to perform it. But the manner of performance contributes more to its effect than the composition itself. So we shall bring it home with us. Moreover, as it is one of the secrets of Rome, we do not wish to let it fall into other hands, ut non incurramus mediate vel immediate in censuram Ecclesiae."
http://bit.ly/1al82dq
James, thank you, that is a wonderful story. HE WROTE IT DOWN FROM MEMORY!!!!!! There are times when I simply stand in awe -- Mozart is one, von Neumann is another.
ReplyDelete