I discovered a set of anonymous pieces -- excerpts, as it turns out -- here on IMSLP.
Link: http://imslp.org/wiki/6_Morceaux_Anonymes_(Anonymous)
I am dying to know who wrote No. 4, the song with piano.
Here's what I've found out:
- The poem is by Andre Foulon de Vauxl.
- The pieces were part of a contest (January 1905 issue of Musica, No. 28) to guess the composer.
- The answers were published in the April 1905 issue, No. 31.
- The composers were Debussy, Saint-Saens, Cecile Chaminade, Jules Massenet, Rudolphe Berger, and Gaston Serpette.
Of course, I can't find the issue with the answers anywhere, so I'm still left guessing. I think I've ruled out Debussy and Saint-Saens from other sources. Looks like Berger and Serpette wrote operettas, in a very different style than this. So... Chaminade? Massenet? Anyone familiar with this song? I'm dying to solve the mystery!!
Need help solving a mystery!
Moderator: kcleung
Re: Need help solving a mystery!
The link contains no music.
Re: Need help solving a mystery!
The closing brace should be part of the link, then it works:
http://imslp.org/wiki/6_Morceaux_Anonymes_(Anonymous)
http://imslp.org/wiki/6_Morceaux_Anonymes_(Anonymous)
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Re: Need help solving a mystery!
For certain it is not Debussy - the last piece of this group is known as "Morceau de concours" or "Assez vite et tres rhythmé":
http://imslp.org/wiki/Morceau_de_concou ... y,_Claude)
Based of the style of piano writing I would guess Massenet. He liked chordal accompaniments in the right hand without any bass (even in his operas: "Adieu, notre petite table" from Manon). A note from the book "Debussy and the Fragment" (available in preview on Google Books) on page 130 (footnote 30) seems to suggest that the order of composers is thus:
1 - Serpette
2- Saint-Saëns
3 - Chaminade
4 - Massenet
5 - Berger
6 - Debussy
Hope this helps!
http://imslp.org/wiki/Morceau_de_concou ... y,_Claude)
Based of the style of piano writing I would guess Massenet. He liked chordal accompaniments in the right hand without any bass (even in his operas: "Adieu, notre petite table" from Manon). A note from the book "Debussy and the Fragment" (available in preview on Google Books) on page 130 (footnote 30) seems to suggest that the order of composers is thus:
1 - Serpette
2- Saint-Saëns
3 - Chaminade
4 - Massenet
5 - Berger
6 - Debussy
Hope this helps!
Re: Need help solving a mystery!
Thanks so much, pocoallegro!