Bizet
Bizet
Bizet
Bizet arrived at the Villa Medici, a 16th-century palace, which since 1803 had
housed the French Académie on 27 January 1858. Under the director Jean-Victor
Schnetz, a painter the villa offered an optimal ambience in which Bizet and his
fellow-laureates could pursue their artistic endeavors.
In Rome during the first six months, Bizet’s only composition was a Te Deum,
which was written for the Rodrigues Prize, a competition for a new religious work
open to Prix de Rome winners. Bizet’s work failed to impress the judges, and the
prize was awarded to Adrien Barthe, the only other entrant. Bizet was so
disheartened that he vowed to write no more religious music. Te Deum remained in
oblivion until 1971.
In July 1860, just after Bizet left Rome, and was still touring in Italy, an idea of
writing a symphony in which each of the four movements would be a musical
evocation of a different Italian city – Rome, Venice, Florence and Naples occurred
to him. But after he heard of his mother's serious illness, he was compelled to wrap
up his Italian travels. He returned to Paris in September 1860; his mother died a
year later. Though the Scherzo of the symphony got completed by November 1861,
yet it was not until 1866 that the first version of the complete symphony was
written. It went through a number of revisions through to 1871 and Bizet died
before he could produce that can be considered to be a definitive version. Therefore,
sometimes the work is said to be an "unfinished" one, but this is not the right
description as it was fully scored. In 1880, it was published as the Roma Symphony.
Bizet’s family maid, Marie Reiter, gave birth to a son,
Jean Bizet in June 1862. The boy was believed to be
George's half-brother. But, on her deathbed, the maid
later revealed that the boy’s true father was Georges
Bizet. In 1862, his former teacher Halévy died, leaving
his last opera Noé unfinished. Bizet completed it, but
remained unperformed till 1885, ten years after Bizet's
own death.
In June 1871, Bizet's was appointed as chorus-master at The Opéra and
he was due to begin his duties in October, but on 1 November, the post
was assumed by Hector Salomon. In Bizet’s biography, Mina Curtis
wrote that Bizet either resigned or refused to take up the position as a
protest against what he thought was the director's unjustified closing of
Ernest Reyer's opera Erostrate after only two performances. In 1871,
Bizet wrote the piano duet entitled Jeux d'enfants, and a one-act opera,
Djamileh, which opened at the Opéra-Comique in May 1872. However, it
was poorly staged and incompetently sung as a consequence was closed
after 11 performances, not to be heard again until 1938
'Carmen' (1875) based on a novella of the same title written in 1846 by
the French writer Prosper Mérimée is Bizet’s most significant work. He
composed the title role for a mezzo-soprano. A major part of it was
completed during the summer of 1873, but remained incomplete until the
end of 1874, during the time his marriage went through a lot of strain
and he separated from his wife for two months. 'Carmen' was premiered
on 3 March 1875, at the Opéra-Comique in Paris. Though initially not
well-received, it ran for 37 performances in the next three months, an
average of three a week, making it Bizet's biggest success till that day.
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