Hear Debussy Play Debussy's Most Famous Piece, "Clair de lune" (1913) | Open Culture Hear Debussy Play Debussy's Most Famous Piece, "Clair de lune" (1913)

Hear Debussy Play Debussy’s Most Famous Piece, “Clair de lune” (1913)

Claude Debussy died in 1918, at the age of 55: still quite young for a com­pos­er, and still quite ear­ly in the his­to­ry of sound record­ing. This means that, a lit­tle over a cen­tu­ry lat­er, we have a great many record­ings of Debussy’s music, but pre­cious few record­ings of Debussy’s music played by the man him­self. Once he accom­pa­nied opera singer Mary Gar­den in the per­for­mance of three mélodies from Ari­ettes oubliées, his cycle based on the poet­ry of Paul Ver­laine. Those record­ings were made in 1904, and sound it. But in his final years, Debussy also pre­served his play­ing with an out­ward­ly more prim­i­tive tech­nol­o­gy that nev­er­the­less sounds much more pleas­ing today: the piano roll.

Designed to be fed into and auto­mat­i­cal­ly repro­duced by spe­cial­ly engi­neered instru­ments, the piano roll — an ear­ly form of the music media we’ve enjoyed over the past few gen­er­a­tions — was com­mer­cial­ly pio­neered by the Amer­i­can com­pa­ny M. Welte & Sons. “It is impos­si­ble to attain a greater per­fec­tion of repro­duc­tion than that of the Welte appa­ra­tus,” Debussy once wrote to Edwin Welte, co-inven­tor of the fam­i­ly com­pa­ny’s Welte-Mignon Repro­duc­ing Piano.

The four­teen pieces Debussy record­ed for Welte include the Sym­bol­ist- and Impres­sion­ist-inspired “La soirée dans Grenade,” pre­vi­ous­ly fea­tured here on Open Cul­ture, as well as his most beloved and wide­ly heard work, “Clair de lune.”

Imme­di­ate­ly rec­og­niz­able in iso­la­tion, the also Ver­laine-based “Clair de lune” con­sti­tutes one of the four move­ments of the Suite berga­masque. The entire piece was first pub­lished in 1905, but Debussy had actu­al­ly begun its com­po­si­tion fif­teen years before that. The still-fre­quent use of the third move­ment in pop­u­lar cul­ture has, at this point, made it dif­fi­cult to hear the essen­tial qual­i­ties of the piece itself; under such cir­cum­stances, who bet­ter to bring those qual­i­ties out than the com­pos­er him­self? The video at the top of the post presents a repro­duc­tion of “Clair de lune” from the piano roll that Debussy made 109 years ago, the next best thing to hav­ing him at the piano. Enthu­si­asts won­der what Debussy would have writ­ten had he lived longer; hear­ing this, they may also won­der what he would have record­ed had he stuck around for the hi-fi age.

Relat­ed Con­tent:

Debussy’s “Clair de lune”: The Clas­si­cal Music Visu­al­iza­tion with 21 Mil­lion Views

A Dancer Pays a Grav­i­ty-Defy­ing Trib­ute to Claude Debussy

Hear Debussy Play Debussy: A Vin­tage Record­ing from 1913

Rach­mani­noff Plays Rach­mani­noff: Three Famous Pieces, 1919–1929

Hear Rav­el Play Rav­el in 1922

Gersh­win Plays Gersh­win: Hear the Orig­i­nal Record­ing of Rhap­sody in Blue, with the Com­pos­er Him­self at the Piano (1924)

Based in Seoul, Col­in Mar­shall writes and broad­casts on cities and cul­ture. His projects include the book The State­less City: a Walk through 21st-Cen­tu­ry Los Ange­les and the video series The City in Cin­e­ma. Fol­low him on Twit­ter at @colinmarshall or on Face­book.


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Comments (8)
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  • Janet Curry says:

    This moves me to my core. No words can express my feel­ings lis­ten­ing to him play this piece of art.

    Thank you.

  • Christos Marinos says:

    With all due respect, allow me to explain why this arti­cle is inac­cu­rate. Debussy nev­er record­ed “Clair de lune”. In the cd titled “Debussy plays Debussy”, the com­pos­er actu­al­ly plays 7 of the fea­tured works. “Clair de lune” is played by Suzanne Godenne (the same record­ing you post­ed in your arti­cle can be found on YouTube under dif­fer­ent url address­es ~ with Godenne’s name and not Debussy’s).

    Here is a com­plete list of Debussy’s record­ings made on piano rolls:
    Children’s Cor­ner Suite
    D’un cahi­er d’esquiss­es
    Estam­pes: La soirée dans Grenade
    La plus que lente
    Préludes I: Danseuses de Delphes
    La cathé­drale engloutie
    La Danse de Puck
    Préludes I: Min­strels
    Le vent dans la plaine

    The acousti­cal record­ings Debussy made were with Mary Gar­den.

    Thank you. Hap­py New Year!

  • Christos Marinos says:

    Unfor­tu­nate­ly, the pianist in this record­ing is Suzanne Godenne, and not the com­pos­er him­self.

  • Sandra says:

    Con­gr­tat­u­la­tions to you for giv­ing cred­it where it is due. Noth­ing unfor­tu­nate about that!!

  • Derek Williams says:

    Thank you for mak­ing this cor­rec­tion to the cat­a­logue. I hope it finds its way into the oth­er threads mak­ing this claim.

  • John Link says:

    Beau­ti­ful! But why was the final chord cut off?

  • John Link says:

    Thank you for the cor­rec­tion.

  • Lou Raichle says:

    Agree 100% with Mr. Mari­nos above. Suzanne Goden­ne’s “ver­sion” of Clair de Lune is awful — full of “cute” self-serv­ing “look at me” time-warps and just plain show­ing off. If Debussy had heard it, he’d have stran­gled her. The pro­duc­ers of that oth­er­wise fine CD should nev­er have includ­ed it.

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