Camille Saint-Saëns
Le Carnaval des Animaux for Flute, Oboe, Clarinet, Horn and Bassoon (Contra-bassoon ad. lib.)
Saint-Saens the teacher at the Ecole Niedermeyer (from 1861-1865) had already promised a Carnaval des Animaux to his pupils. Twenty years later he once again took up the idea and implemented it. In the remoteness of a small locality in Austria, to which the composer had withdrawn after a concert tour across Germany in 1886, he wrote the music within a few days. It had been intended as a surprise in a carnaval concert with the famous celloist Lebouc, to whom it offered an opportunity to display his virtuosity in a piece which was to become one of the greatest successes for the composer and the soloist: No. 13 of the Carnaval - Le Cygne (the swan). This was regarded as a masterpiece of perfect melodic invention up to a long way into the twentieth century.
The small pieces offer entertainment in a way which recalls Erik Satie with all its exaggerations, distortions, the penetration and the ridicule of too familiar things. The lion is characterised by a blustered royal march; mules, characteristic as sluggish creatures, are depicted as “fast animals”. Then there is a humorous presentation of the most sensational dance of the Second Empire, the Can-Can from Offenbach's Orpheus in the Underworld. The elephant dances to the music of the dance of the sylphs from the Condemnation of Faust by Berlioz and Mendelssohn's Summer night's Dream.
Was the fear to destroy the composer's reputation the reason Saint-Saëns himself had prohibited performances of the complete Carnaval des Animaux a few years after the first performance, with the exception of Le Cygne? Only in his Will there was a clause repealing the prohibition, which was immediately followed by publication by Durand.
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Camille Saint-Saëns (1835 - 1921)
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Charles Lebouc
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The inducement for arranging this music had been numerous requests of musicians for a second piece of music which could be performed in a concert ( especially for children) together with my arrangement of
"Peter and the Wolf".
The piece "The elephant" can be best performed by double bassoon, No. 8 sounds like the screaming of a donkey best played by piccolo. Because there are no pianists any more No. 11 could be announced as comers on their wind instruments who have to practise for a special examination.
There is a excellent text (German) by Loriot written for this Carnaval des Animaux, printed by Diogenes.