Les Boreades: The Arts and the Hours
(as played by Vikingur Olafsson) C# Major VERSION
Jean Philippe Rameau /arr. Flavio Regis Cunha
Rameau: Les Boreades: "The Arts and the Hours" for Piano (as
played by Vikingur Olafsson) C# Major Version. Read More
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Rameau: Les Boreades: "The Arts and the Hours" for Piano (as
played by Vikingur Olafsson) C# Major Version.
Les Boreades is a tragedie lyrique mise en musique, or a lyric tragedy put
into music, a type of opera, in five acts by Jean-Philippe Rameau
(1683-1764). It is the last of his five such works. The libretto, attributed
to Louis de Cahusac (1706 to 1759), is loosely based on the Greek legend of
Abaris the Hyperborean and includes Masonic elements; the Boreades are the
descendants of Boreas.
'The Arts and The Hours' interlude from Rameau's final opera, Les Boreades,
written in 1763 when Rameau was 80.
Olafsson played it on the piano because its colourful resonance because its
colourful resonance allows for new and interesting textural possibilities in
a piece that seems so ahead of its time: its rich harmonies of suspended 9ths
and 11ths one could almost imagine Mahler writing in the late 19th century.
In the original opera, based on a Greek legend, the interlude bears a
somewhat lengthy title: "The Arrival of the Muses, Zephyrs, Seasons,
Hours and the Arts." As all these mythical beings summoned to the stage
have something to do with the arts and with time's passing, Olafsson allowed
himself to call my transcription simply 'The Arts and the Hours', with a nod
to the Greek aphorism best known in its Latin version as "Ars longa,
vita brevis". Almost three centuries after his death, the legacy of his
art is still growing, with works still being discovered, premiered and
brought back from obscurity.