Jacques Delécluse: Etude No. 3

Музыка

Jacques Delécluse is the son of Ulysse Delécluse, who was a very famous clarinet player and teacher in France. Jacques first started to study piano and was a very gifted pianist, a very good student, and an excellent musician. He received the First Prize at the Conservatoire de Paris in 1950 (best of the competition), with better results than many students who became great and famous soloists, such as Philippe Entremont.
A couple of years before, Jacques started to study percussion with Felix Passerone, principal timpanist of the Paris Opera and teacher at the Conservatoire of Paris-the master of an entire generation of famous French percussionists. In 1950, just one week before he got the First Prize for piano, Jacques also received the Second Prize for percussion. The other students at this time were Jacques Rémy (former principal timpanist of the Orchestre de Paris), Jean Batigne (who created the Percussions de Strasbourg), and Jean-Claude Tavernier (retired from Orchestre National de France and a famous author).
At the Conservatoire of Paris, Jacques also studied harmony, counterpoint, and composition, and he received the First Prize for percussion in 1951. It was then that he chose to become a percussionist and timpanist. He subsequently took part in the creation of the Domaine Musical with Pierre Boulez, and was appointed to the Paris Opera and the Société des Concerts du Conservatoire, which ultimately became Orchestre de Paris in 1967.
In this same year Delécluse left the Paris Opera to become a full member of the Orchestre de Paris-as a pianist! However, he started to play percussion again very soon and, returning to his first professional passion, he became timpanist of the orchestra in 1993-but he still played piano, too! He was probably the only musician able to perform perfectly both the timpani part to “The Rite of Spring” and the piano part to “Petrouchka”!
Talent and a sense of music are the very special qualities obvious in Delécluse’s writing and teaching. The main reason why Jacques Delécluse’s etudes have been so popular all around the world for more than 40 years is because they have a musical sense: they are written not by only a percussionist but by a composer and a complete musician. As Eric Sammut says, “Delécluse’s etudes are real concert etudes. One can often see people in tuxedos playing some of them on stage!”
When Jacques started to write his etudes in 1964, there was almost nothing in the repertoire for snare drum in France: no methods, no books, no etudes, no solo pieces. Percussionists had to study from orchestral excerpts, military drum books, and a couple of low-level standard pieces. Delécluse did not merely revolutionize the pedagogical writing for percussion, he invented it! From nothing, he built a real school for percussion and created a pedagogical repertoire for snare drum, xylophone, timpani, and vibraphone. There is a good reason that most of these books are still in use today all around the world.
In 1964, Jacques released his famous 12 Etudes for Snare Drum, published by Alphonse Leduc. Like many of his works, these etudes are inspired by the orchestral repertoire. But contrary to the majority of the other books, Delécluse’s studies are completely musical-no mindless technical patterns, no measures without artistic sense, but rather expressive dynamics, intelligent phrases, useful foundations from which to progress on the instrument, and a wonderful source for exams, auditions, and performance repertoire. These are the reasons for the success of his works.
As Jacques writes himself, “These etudes are difficult only as far as the metronomic markings, the dynamics, accents, and ‘connecting tissue’ are strictly observed.” This is why the famous “Etude #9” (based on Rimsky Korsakov’s “Capriccio Espagnol”) has a real interest if one plays it at the indicated tempo (mm = 66-69). Many players can play it slower, but the real pedagogical and musical interest is at the exact tempo. Each etude has its own musical character and has to be played not only with a perfect technique but also with a real musical expression. This is why Delecluse’s etudes are requested in many exams and auditions: they make it possibile to evaluate a player in a very short time.
Jacques Delécluse brought a new dimension to percussion playing: to consider dynamics, accents, phrases, and musical expression. In short, he makes us think about “how to make music with a drum.” This idea took root more than 40 years ago and is still applicable today. Jacques truly created a “school of percussion” and has deeply influenced generations of percussion players and teachers not only in France, but all over the world.

Пікірлер: 2

  • @raymondgonzalez5690
    @raymondgonzalez56908 ай бұрын

    Yur

  • @shadesketch9572
    @shadesketch95724 жыл бұрын

    0:12