L'Arlésienne (Bizet)


L'Arlésienne is incidental music composed by Georges Bizet for Alphonse Daudet's drama of the same name. It was first performed on 30 September 1872 at the Théâtre du Vaudeville in Paris. Bizet's original incidental music consists of 27 numbers for chorus and small orchestra, ranging from pieces of background music only a few measures long, to entr'actes. The score achieves powerful dramatic ends with the most economic of means. Still, the work received poor reviews in the wake of the unsuccessful premiere and is not often performed now in its original form, although recordings are available. However, key pieces of the incidental music, most often heard in the form of two suites for full orchestra, have become some of Bizet's most popular compositions.

History

Composition history

In July 1872, Léon Carvalho, the new director of the Théâtre du Vaudeville, having previously collaborated with Bizet in producing his operas The Pearl Fishers and The Fair Maid of Perth at the Théâtre Lyrique, commissioned him to write music for his new venture—L'Arlésienne, a play by Alphonse Daudet. Although the drama was based on the author's short story of the same name, first published in the newspaper L'Événement, and later in his collection Lettres de mon moulin, the plot was originally inspired by a real event: the suicide of a nephew of writer Frédéric Mistral as a consequence of amour fou. Carvalho planned to relieve the bleak tragedy of this "rustic drama" by presenting the play with music and choruses. "The piece is a little too sombre for my theatre", said Carvalho, "but I think the music will be a powerful attraction and it will soften somewhat the cruelty of the play." However, there was some risk in this approach, as this genre was in decline.
L'Arlésienne, incidental music, Op. 23
Bizet composed 27 numbers for the five act play, which was presented in three acts and five scenes. Half of the numbers, mostly mélodrames, are quite short and are designed to be performed as background music for spoken drama. On the other hand, seven numbers, including the Prélude, four entr'actes, one longer mélodrame and the Farandole, are both distinctive and lengthy enough to stand on their own outside of their stage setting.
The drama is set on the Rhône river, in Camargue, south of Arles, in southwestern Provence. To help give the composition Provençal color, Bizet used three existing tunes from a folk/traditional music collection found in the book Lou Tambourin, Istori de l'Estrumen Prouvençau by writer and tambourinaire François Vidal:
  • № 3: Danso dei Chivau-Frus —a brisk tune scored by Bizet for flute, piccolo, and tambourin ; combined ingeniously with March of the Kings in the Farandole in act 3 at the climax of the drama.
  • № 7: Èr dóu Guet—an "air provençal" heard in the form of a brief berceuse in a mélodrame in act 2.
  • № 31: Marcho dei Rèi —a Provençal Christmas carol from Avignon celebrating the Epiphany and the Three Kings; also identified as Marche de Turenne, supposedly composed by Jean-Baptiste Lully some 200 years earlier; quoted five times at the beginning of the Overture in different harmonizations and orchestrations; reappears in the form of a chorus in act 3.
The premiere took place on 30 September 1872 in the Théâtre du Vaudeville. Bizet's music is scored for a chorus of 24 singers and an orchestra of only 26 players. Bizet played the harmonium backstage at the theater in support of the chorus. Production was rushed as the play was staged as a last-minute replacement for another play, which had been banned by the censors, and the audience was less than favourably disposed to the new play. The premiere was a failure and the production closed after 19 performances. Daudet later bitterly remarked: "It was a resounding flop amid the prettiest music in the world, silk and velvet costumes, and comic opera scenery. I came out of there discouraged, still hearing the silly laughter caused by the emotional scenes." "It was clear from the beginning that a drama of passion from the Camargue would not appeal to the sophisticated tastes of the Paris boulevards."
L'Arlésienne Suite No. 1, Op. 23bis
Bizet was assured that the best numbers from the incidental music, arranged for a full symphony orchestra, would be successful in the concert hall. He planned a five movement suite as follows: 1. Prélude, 2. Carillon, 3. Adagietto, 4. Minuetto, 5. Final. Later he exchanged the positions of the 2nd and 4th numbers and abandoned the final one, leaving a four movement orchestral suite:
  1. Prélude
  2. Minuetto
  3. Adagietto
  4. Carillon
The order of the movements does not correspond precisely with that of the incidental music, but conforms rather to the character and tempo conventions of a short symphony. The Prélude and Adagietto closely resemble their original versions except for their expanded instrumentation. The Adagietto, previously scored for muted string quartet, particularly benefits from its new massed, but muted, string sonority. The main difference in the Minuetto is a six bar addition to its coda. The Carillon, on the other hand, is considerably enlarged by the addition of the andantino that framed the Adagietto, followed by a shortened repeat of the opening section. Thus the movement now has an ABA form.
The original title of the new work was L'Arlésienne, Suite d'Orchestre, but after the appearance of a second suite, it would be known as L'Arlésienne, 1re Suite d'Orchestre. It was first performed on 10 November 1872 under Jules Pasdeloup of the Concerts populaires in the Cirque d'hiver with great success. The Minuetto had to be encored, and the Adagietto was almost accorded the same honor.
L'Arlésienne Suite No. 2
L'Arlésienne Suite No. 1 became so popular that the publisher Choudens commissioned a second set, L'Arlésienne, 2me Suite d'Orchestre, in 1879, four years after Bizet's death. His friend Ernest Guiraud is claimed to have arranged the other three large scale movements and, adding an extraneous number, assembled a second four movement suite as follows:
  1. Pastorale
  2. Intermezzo
  3. Minuet
  4. Farandole
The choral parts of the Pastorale were arranged for orchestra. This two part movement takes an ABA form, like the Carillon movement, by a repeat of the opening music. The Intermezzo has a 12 measure addition based on the central theme inserted 4 bars before the end. The Minuet was taken from Scènes bohémiennes, a suite of material originally composed for Bizet's 1866 opera La jolie fille de Perth, where it "accompanies the duke's wooing of the false Catherine in Act III". The Farandole is a condensation of two numbers of the incidental music – № 22: Final, and № 23: Entr'acte and Chorus. The choruses in these numbers were either omitted or arranged for orchestra.
Although the arrangements in L'Arlésienne Suite No. 2 are assumed to be Guiraud's work and the composition is clearly not as unified as the first suite, it contains a large proportion of inspired Bizet material, and is therefore generally credited to Bizet. The first performance of L'Arlésienne Suite No. 2 took place on 21 March 1880 when Jules Pasdeloup again led the orchestra of the Concerts populaires.
L'Arlésienne, incidental music
The popularity of Bizet's music for L'Arlésienne was undoubtedly one of the factors prompting a later reappraisal of the original drama, and on 5 May 1885, a revival took place at the Théâtre de l'Odéon in Paris. Although the play was again received coldly initially, the success of this production resulted in a subsequent run of over 400 performances. A new version of the score for full orchestra was used, in which numbers from the suites, now expanded both in content and instrumentation, replaced the original small ensemble orchestrations of the 1872 version. The remaining numbers retained their original orchestrations, and a few numbers were either omitted, duplicated, truncated, or exchanged positions.

Performance history

L'Arlésienne, incidental music
PersonnelRole1872 premiere1885 revival
ProductionDirectorLéon CarvalhoPaul Porel
ProductionDesignerCharles-Antoine Cambon
Philippe Chaperon
Jean-Louis Chéret
Auguste Alfred Rubé
Philippe Chaperon
Alfred Lemeunier
Auguste Alfred Rubé
ProductionConductorMarc ConstantinÉdouard Colonne
CastFrancet MamaïErnest CornagliaErnest Cornaglia
CastFrédériAbelAlbert Lambert
CastBalthazarJean-Auguste ParadePaul Mounet
CastLe Patron MarcColsonSujol
CastMitifioRégnierArthur Rebel
CastL'équipagePierre LacroixFréville
CastUn valetMoissonDalier
CastRose MamaïAnaïs FargueilAimée Tessandier
CastRenaudeClémence AlexisIrma Crosnier
CastL'InnocentMorandLéonie Yahne
CastVivetteJulia BartetZélie Hadamard
CastUne servanteLeroyNoémie

L'Arlésienne, Suite d'Orchestre
DateLocationConductorOrchestra
1872 November 10ParisJules PasdeloupConcerts populaires
1873 November 9ParisÉdouard ColonneConcert National
1875 February 21ParisÉdouard DeldevezConcerts du Conservatoire
1876 October 6New YorkTheodore ThomasTheodore Thomas Orchestra

Instrumentation

The score of the original incidental music is notable not only for its light instrumentation, but also for its unusual composition—particularly the small number of violas and brass instruments, and the introduction of two instruments new to the orchestra.
SectionIncidental musicSuite No. 1Suite No. 2
Strings• 4 violins I
• 3 violins II
• 1 viola
• 5 cellos
• 2 double basses
• violins I
• violins II
• violas
• cellos
• double basses
• violins I
• violins II
• violas
• cellos
• double basses
Woodwinds• 2 flutes
• 1 oboe
• 1 clarinet
• 2 bassoons
• 1 alto saxophone
• 2 flutes
• 2 oboes
• 2 clarinets
• 2 bassoons
• 1 alto saxophone
• 2 flutes
• 2 oboes
• 2 clarinets
• 2 bassoons
• 1 alto saxophone
Brass2 horns, one natural, one valved• 4 horns
• 2 trumpets
• 2 cornets
• 3 trombones
• 4 horns
• 2 trumpets
• 2 cornets
• 3 trombones
Percussiontimpani timpani
drum
• timpani
tambourin provençal
bass drum
cymbals
Additionalpiano harp or pianoharp or piano

The score makes novel use of the saxophone, at this time just being introduced after its invention in the 1840s. Some have associated the instrument with the character l'Innocent. However, only the first of the eight appearances of his theme is scored for the saxophone; the remaining seven are played by strings. Furthermore, the saxophone appears prominently in the entr'acte before act 2, tableau 2, which may be said to be associated with the character Vivette.
The specific drum to use in the percussion section is an issue of some confusion. Both Bizet's incidental music manuscript of 1872 and the score of L'Arlésienne Suite No. 2, arranged by Guiraud in 1879, specify a "tambourin", a large tabor not to be confused with the tambourine. The tambourin provençal is a low-pitched tenor drum, the length of which is typically about twice its diameter. In Provence, the tambourin is usually played in conjunction with the galoubet, making this combination a unique Provençal pipe and tabor. This is the effect Bizet had in mind when he set the tune "Danso dei Chivau-Frus", used in the Farandole to evoke the sound of tambourinaires playing during a festival celebrating Saint Eligius.
In the absence of a genuine tambourin, a tom drum or a snareless side drum is sometimes substituted. This was the circumstance in the premiere production, during which critic Arthur Pougin of Le Soir complained that the tambourin provençal had been replaced by an ordinary drum. Herbert von Karajan and Leonard Bernstein are two examples of conductors who mistakenly use a tambourine in recordings. The score of the first number of L'Arlésienne Suite No. 1, 'Prélude', specifies merely a "tambour", and although a tambourin de Provence could just as well be employed here also, many orchestras use a snare drum.

Incidental music (1872)

Setting
The action takes place in Camargue, on the Rhône River, near the Étang de Vaccarès. The time is unspecified. The season in which the story takes place is a point of some confusion. At the beginning of act 1, Balthazar mentions that it is the first of May. In act 3, he mentions that it is now June. This occurs just before the Farandole, during which the peasants are celebrating Saint Éloi (Eligius), patron saint of horses, farriers, and husbandry. However, his feast day does not occur until the first of December.
Main Characters
  • Francet Mamaï, farmer of le Castelet, grandfather of Frédéri and L'Innocent
  • Rose Mamaï, a widow, Francet's daughter-in-law, mother of Frédéri and L'Innocent
  • Frédéri, the protagonist, obsessively in love with the woman from Arles
  • L'Innocent, Frédéri's brother Janet; regarded as having a developmental disability
  • Balthazar, chief shepherd
  • La Renaude, Balthazar's youthful love, Vivette's grandmother
  • Vivette, Rose's goddaughter, to whom Frédéri's becomes engaged
  • Patron Marc, Rose's brother, a Rhône sailor
  • Mitifio, a horseherd, lover of the woman from Arles

Synopsis

The Prélude begins with five different orchestrations of the March of the Kings, and concludes with the first of several quotations in the score of L'Innocent's theme, and Frédéri's theme.
Act 1
Tableau 1: The Farm of Castelet
In Scene 1, Francet Mamaï tells Balthazar of Frédéri's passion for a woman from Arles. L'Innocent, whose theme dominates the first mélodrame and the next two numbers, wants Balthazar to finish his story about Mr. Seguin's goat, who was attacked by a wolf. Balthazar assures the boy he will continue the story shortly. Francet reports that Frédéri doesn't eat or sleep and is in the grip of a kind of love fever. Francet and Balthazar agree that Frédéri would be better off marrying an industrious local girl, such as Vivette Renaude, rather than a "town hussy". Rose's brother Marc, who lives in Arles, and is due to arrive soon, has been tasked with investigating the Arlésienne and her family to be sure they are respectable.
The next mélodrame links the first scene to the second, in which Balthazar continues telling the goat story to l'Innocent. Vivette enters in Scene 3, and asks Balthazar if l'Innocent can be cured. Balthazar repeats the superstitious belief that an Innocent in the household protects the others from evil and harm. The third mélodrame accompanies the exchange between Vivette and Balthazar, in which the shepherd says he thinks something is stirring in l'Innocent's mind: "That child is waking up... and if he does wake up, everybody about the place must be on their guard." Rose enters in Scene 4, and eventually reports Frédéri's engagement. When l'Innocent climbs high up into the hayloft in the turret, Rose, annoyed, expresses her dread that someone might fall from there onto the flagstones in the courtyard. In Scene 5, Frédéri enters, greets his mother, but takes no notice of Vivette, who is crushed.
Patron Marc enters in Scene 6 with nothing negative to report about the Arlésienne – she and her family are all fine people. He tells Francet he is expected to go to Arles to make a marriage offer. In Scene 8 Balthazar, alone, notes Vivette's grief – she loves Frédéri secretly and suffers in silence, just like her grandmother did. A mélodrame, with offstage chorus 'Grand soleil de la Provence', also introduces the theme of the gardian Mitifio, whom Balthazar notices skulking about. Mitifio reveals to Francet that the Arlésienne has been his mistress for two years, and he means to keep her. He has letters from the Arlésienne confirming his story; Francet asks to borrow them. In the final mélodrame, Frédéri is about to go off to Arles, but Francet shows him Mitifio's letters. The chorus bursts in with a reprise of 'Grand soleil de la Provence', and Frédéri's theme accompanies his collapse by the well.
Act 2
Tableau 1: The Shore of the Étang de Vaccarès in Camargue
An entr'acte, later appearing as the first movement in the Suite No. 2, sets the scene. In the following Mélodrame Balthazar and l'Innocent enter with "agitated modulations" in the latter's theme, and the next marks the exit of Rose. The mélodrame № 10 accompanies the discovery of Fréderi in the shepherd's hut, angry because everyone is spying on him. A wordless offstage chorus sing, Balthazar leaves, having failed to make Frédéri destroy the letters from the Arlésienne which he reads night and day. The following mélodrame is only six bars; l'Innocent cannot recall the story he wants to tell his brother. In the next mélodrame described as a berceuse, l'Innocent falls asleep while telling his story. The final mélodrame evokes Rose's desperation at Fréderi's frame of mind.
Tableau 2: The Kitchen at Castelet
An entr'acte depicts Vivette, the local girl who wants to marry Frédéri, preparing her parcels to take on the Rhône ferry. After men prepare to go out shooting game, Rose and the others fear that Frédéri might kill himself. At the end of the act when Frédéri decides that Vivette can help him forget his obsession, Balthazar and Rose express their relief.
Intermezzo
The Valse-Menuet is performed between acts 2 and 3.
Act 3
Tableau 1: The Castelet Farm Courtyard
An entr'acte introduces the first scene of act 3. In the first mélodrame in Scene 3, a 6/8 Andantino marks the entrance of Mère Renaude, and in the following Adagio Balthazar and Renaude reminisce about their youthful unrequited love. As all move off to eat, there is a reprise of the Andantino. Another Andantino follows the exit of Frédéri and Vivette as they declare their love. The farandole, which begins quietly and builds to a climax, sees Frédéri respond with fury to Mitifio, who has come to recover his letters. Mitifio tells Balthazar that he will run off with the woman from Arles.
Tableau 2: The Magnanery
A brief statement of the 'Dance of the Frisky Horses' theme is heard, then the March of the Kings is sung by the chorus, after which the two are combined. Next, there is a brief reprise for chorus of the March of the Kings. In № 25, l'Innocent 'awakens' showing he understands his brother's problem. In a mélodrame Rose is momentarily reassured as the clock strikes three, although when she has left Frédéri enters to his theme now "a chromatic scale on a pedal bass". After he has leapt from the hayloft to his death on the courtyard pavement, the orchestra plays a powerful tutti version of his theme which brings down the curtain.

Structure

ActNo.TitleBarsNotesSuites
Prélude1Prélude• Marcho dei Rèi
• L'Innocent's theme
• Frédéri's theme
Suite 1, № 1
'Prélude'
Acte 1
La ferme de Castelet
2MélodrameL'Innocent's theme
Acte 1
La ferme de Castelet
3MélodrameL'Innocent's theme
Acte 1
La ferme de Castelet
4MélodrameL'Innocent's theme
Acte 1
La ferme de Castelet
5Chœur et Mélodrame• Chorus: 'Grand soleil de la Provence'
• Mitifio's theme
Acte 1
La ferme de Castelet
6Mélodrame et Chœur final• Mitifio's theme
• Chorus: 'Grand soleil de la Provence'
• Frédéri's theme
Entr'acte7Entr'acte et chœur: Pastorale• Entr'acte
• Chorus: 'La la-la-la-la-la'
Suite 2, № 1
'Pastorale'
Acte 2, tableau 1
Les bords de l'Étang de Vaccarès
en Camargue
8MélodrameL'Innocent's theme
Acte 2, tableau 1
Les bords de l'Étang de Vaccarès
en Camargue
9MélodrameL'Innocent's theme
Acte 2, tableau 1
Les bords de l'Étang de Vaccarès
en Camargue
10MélodrameFrédéri's theme
Acte 2, tableau 1
Les bords de l'Étang de Vaccarès
en Camargue
11ChœurChorus: The shepherds' call
Acte 2, tableau 1
Les bords de l'Étang de Vaccarès
en Camargue
12MélodrameFrédéri's theme
Acte 2, tableau 1
Les bords de l'Étang de Vaccarès
en Camargue
13MélodrameAir provençal: Èr dóu Guet
Acte 2, tableau 1
Les bords de l'Étang de Vaccarès
en Camargue
14Mélodrame et ChœurChorus: 'La la-la-la-la-la'
Entr'acte15Entr'acte• Maestoso
• Vivette's theme
• Maestoso
Suite 2, № 2
'Intermezzo'
Acte 2, tableau 2
La cuisine de Castelet
16FinalVivette's themeSuite 2, № 2
'Intermezzo'
Entr'acte17Valse-MenuetMinuettoSuite 1, № 2
'Minuetto'
Entr'acte18CarillonCarillon Suite 1, № 4
'Carillon'
Acte 3, tableau 1
La cour du Castelet
19Mélodrame• Mère Renaud's theme
• Adagietto
• Mère Renaud's theme
Suite 1, № 3
'Adagietto'
Acte 3, tableau 1
La cour du Castelet
20Minuetto
Acte 3, tableau 1
La cour du Castelet
21MélodrameVivette's theme
Acte 3, tableau 1
La cour du Castelet
22FinalDanso dei Chivau-Frus
Suite 2, № 4
'Farandole'
Entr'acte23Entr'acte et Chœur• Frédéri's theme
• L'Innocent's theme
• Danso dei Chivau-Frus
• Marcho dei Rèi
• Danso dei Chivau-Frus + Marcho dei Rèi
Suite 2, № 4
'Farandole'
Acte 3, tableau 2
La magnanerie
24ChœurMarcho dei Rèi
Acte 3, tableau 2
La magnanerie
25MélodrameL'Innocent's theme
Acte 3, tableau 2
La magnanerie
26MélodrameFrédéri's theme
Acte 3, tableau 2
La magnanerie
27FinalFrédéri's theme

Note:
  • The number '№ 5' does not appear in the original sequence, perhaps indicating the removal of some material. Most of the pieces following this one have therefore been renumbered in blue or red.
  • The Valse-Menuet and Carillon were originally together designated № 17: Entr'acte A and B. The Valse-Menuet was later designated 'Intermezzo ' in the 1885 piano-vocal score, published 10 years after Bizet's death.
  • № 20 is reported by musicologist Hugh Macdonald to have been a 'Reprise de l'Intermezzo'. This reprise is not present in the composer's manuscript.
Source: Piano vocal score, Choudens, Paris
ActNo.TitleBarsTempoBarsProminent InstrumentsThemesSuites
Overture1OuvertureAllegro deciso—Tempo di MarciaStringsMarcho dei RèiSuite 1, № 1
'Prélude'
Overture1OuvertureAllegro deciso—Tempo di MarciaWoodwindsMarcho dei RèiSuite 1, № 1
'Prélude'
Overture1OuvertureAllegro deciso—Tempo di MarciaDrum, orchestraMarcho dei RèiSuite 1, № 1
'Prélude'
Overture1OuvertureAndantinoBassoons, horns, cellosMarcho dei RèiSuite 1, № 1
'Prélude'
Overture1OuvertureAllegro deciso—Tempo di MarciaOrchestraMarcho dei RèiSuite 1, № 1
'Prélude'
Overture1OuvertureAndanteSaxophone, clarinet, orchestraL'Innocent's themeSuite 1, № 1
'Prélude'
Overture1OuvertureUn peu moins lentViolins, orchestraFrédéri's themeSuite 1, № 1
'Prélude'
Acte 1
Le Castelet
2MélodrameAndanteMuted string quartet, flutesL'Innocent's theme
Acte 1
Le Castelet
3MélodrameAndanteSome strings, woodwindsL'Innocent's theme
Acte 1
Le Castelet
4MélodrameAndantino sostenutoFlutes, cor anglais, viola, celloL'Innocent's theme
Acte 1
Le Castelet
5Chœur et MélodrameAllegro moderatoChorus, piano, harmoniumGrand soleil de la Provence
Acte 1
Le Castelet
5Chœur et MélodrameLargoSaxophone, horn, piano, cellos, bassesMitifio's theme
Acte 1
Le Castelet
6Mélodrame et Chœur finalLargoFlute, viola, cellos, bassesMitifio's theme
Acte 1
Le Castelet
6Mélodrame et Chœur finalAllegroFlute, clarinet, cellos, timpaniGrand soleil de la Provence
Acte 1
Le Castelet
6Mélodrame et Chœur finalAllegro decisoChorus, piano, harmoniumGrand soleil de la Provence
Acte 1
Le Castelet
6Mélodrame et Chœur finalPlus lentOrchestraFrédéri's theme
Acte 2, tableau 1
L'Étang de Vaccarès
7Entr'acte et Chœur: PastoraleAndante sostenuto assaiOrchestraPastoraleSuite 2, № 1
'Pastorale'
Acte 2, tableau 1
L'Étang de Vaccarès
7Entr'acte et Chœur: PastoraleAndantino quasi allegrettoChorus, piccoloLa la-la-la-la-laSuite 2, № 1
'Pastorale'
Acte 2, tableau 1
L'Étang de Vaccarès
8MélodrameAndantino4 violins, 2 cellosL'Innocent's theme
Acte 2, tableau 1
L'Étang de Vaccarès
9MélodrameAllegrettoOrchestraL'Innocent's theme
Acte 2, tableau 1
L'Étang de Vaccarès
10MélodrameAndanteString quartetFrédéri's theme
Acte 2, tableau 1
L'Étang de Vaccarès
11ChœurAdagioChorus, harmoniumThe shepherd's call
Acte 2, tableau 1
L'Étang de Vaccarès
12MélodrameAndanteString quartet, timpaniFrédéri's theme
Acte 2, tableau 1
L'Étang de Vaccarès
13MélodrameAndante assaiMuted string quartetÈr dóu Guet
Acte 2, tableau 1
L'Étang de Vaccarès
14MélodrameAllegroChorus, orchestra
Acte 2, tableau 2
La cuisine de Castelet
15Entr'acteMaestosoOrchestraMaestosoSuite 2, № 2
'Intermezzo'
Acte 2, tableau 2
La cuisine de Castelet
15Entr'acteAllegro moderatoClarinet, saxophone, orchestraVivette's themeSuite 2, № 2
'Intermezzo'
Acte 2, tableau 2
La cuisine de Castelet
15Entr'acteMaestosoOrchestraMaestosoSuite 2, № 2
'Intermezzo'
Acte 2, tableau 2
La cuisine de Castelet
15Entr'acteBeaucoup plus lentOrchestraMaestosoSuite 2, № 2
'Intermezzo'
Acte 2, tableau 2
La cuisine de Castelet
16FinalQuasi-andanteOrchestraVivette's theme
Intermezzo17Valse-MenuetAllegro giocosoOrchestraValse-MenuetSuite 1, № 2
'Minuetto'
Acte 3, tableau 1
La cour du Castelet
18Entr'acte: CarillonAllegretto moderatoHorns, orchestraCarillonSuite 1, № 4
'Carillon'
Acte 3, tableau 1
La cour du Castelet
18Entr'acte: CarillonAndantinoWoodwinds, orchestraMère Renaud's themeSuite 1, № 4
'Carillon'
Acte 3, tableau 1
La cour du Castelet
18Entr'acte: CarillonAllegretto moderatoHorns, orchestraCarillonSuite 1, № 4
'Carillon'
Acte 3, tableau 1
La cour du Castelet
19MélodrameAndantino2 flutes, 2 violins, violaMère Renaud's theme
Acte 3, tableau 1
La cour du Castelet
19MélodrameAdagioViolins, violas, cellosAdagiettoSuite 1, № 3
'Adagietto'
Acte 3, tableau 1
La cour du Castelet
19MélodrameAndantino2 flutes, 2 violins, violaMère Renaud's theme
Acte 3, tableau 1
La cour du Castelet
20MélodrameAndantino espressivoClarinet, piano, stringsVivette's theme
Acte 3, tableau 1
La cour du Castelet
21FarandoleAllegro vivo e decisoFlute, piccolo, tambourin, orchestraDanso dei Chivau-FrusSuite 2, № 4
'Farandole'
Acte 3, tableau 2
La Magnanerie
22Entr'acteAdagioOrchestraAdagietto
Acte 3, tableau 2
La Magnanerie
23ChœurAllegretto giocosoFlute, piccolo, tambourin, orchestraDanso dei Chivau-FrusSuite 2, № 4
'Farandole'
Acte 3, tableau 2
La Magnanerie
23ChœurTempo di marcia molto moderatoChorusMarcho dei RèiSuite 2, № 4
'Farandole'
Acte 3, tableau 2
La Magnanerie
23ChœurAllegretto giocosoFlute, piccolo, tambourin, orchestraDanso dei Chivau-Frus
Marcho dei Rèi
Suite 2, № 4
'Farandole'
Acte 3, tableau 2
La Magnanerie
24ChœurLargeChorusMarcho dei Rèi
Acte 3, tableau 2
La Magnanerie
25MélodrameAndante assaiOrchestraL'Innocent's theme
Acte 3, tableau 2
La Magnanerie
26MélodrameAdagioOrchestraFrédéri's theme
Acte 3, tableau 2
La Magnanerie
27FinalLargeOrchestraFrédéri's theme

Suite No. 1 (1872)

1. Prélude

The suite opens with a strong, energetic theme in C minor, which is based on the Epiphany carol "March of the Kings", played by the violins. Afterwards, the theme is repeated by various sections. After reaching a climax, the theme fades away. It is followed by the F minor theme associated with L'Innocent. The Prélude concludes with the A minor theme associated with Frédéri himself.

2. Minuetto

The second movement resembles a minuet in C minor. The ending of this movement is slightly expanded from the version in the incidental music.


3. Adagietto

The Adagietto is taken from the central Adagio portion of the first number in act 3, no. 19: Mélodrame. The suite version does not include the Andantino that precedes and follows the incidental music version. At only 34 measures, the Adagietto is the shortest number in the score of either suite, but because of its slow tempo, it can last more than 3 minutes, a longer performance duration than that of the Minuetto's 162 measures. It is written in F major, meter throughout. The incidental music version is scored for muted string quartet. The scoring of the suite version is expanded to the entire string section, still muted.


4. Carillon

The last movement is based on no. 18: 'Carillon' from the entr'acte preceding act 3, augmented with the Andantino from the following number, № 19: Mélodrame. A shortened version of the Carillon returns after the Andantino to round off the movement in ABA form.
The Carillon portions of the music are written in E major, meter, Allegretto moderato tempo, and feature an ostinato bell-tone pattern on the horns, perhaps suggesting tolling church bells, throughout. The main melody of the Carillon theme is scored for strings ; the other instruments for the most part play bell tones in support of the horns.
The Andantino is marked 'Entrée de la Mère Renaud' in the 1885 piano vocal score of the incidental music. It is sometimes designated a siciliana or pastorale on account of its minor key, meter, and dotted rhythms. Originally written in C minor, it is here transposed up a semitone to C minor, the relative minor of E major, to facilitate the transition back to the Carillon theme. The main Andantino theme is initially played by the flutes, which are then joined by the oboes, and finally the saxophone. The horns then begin to insinuate themselves, quietly playing the bell theme again, in a skillful transition blending the A and B themes. The reprise of the Carillon theme follows, played first by the oboes before returning to the strings.


Suite No. 2 (1879)

1. Pastorale

The Pastorale begins with an introduction by the wind section, followed by the melody in the strings. The melodies are repeated by various sections throughout the first movement. In the suite, the opening section returns and concludes the piece. In the original version, the "central" section, which was a wordless chorus sung by women, ends the piece.

2. Intermezzo

The Intermezzo in E-Flat major features utilization of low tones and begins with the wind section. Guiraud adds twelve additional bars to the concluding section. Sometime after this second suite was prepared from the L'Arlésienne music, Guiraud extracted the Intermezzo movement, added the Latin sacred text of the Agnus Dei to it, and published it as yet another "new" work of Bizet.


3. Menuet

The menuet in E-Flat major, which is not from L'Arlésienne, but from Bizet's 1866 opera The Fair Maid of Perth, features solos by harp, flute, and, later, saxophone.


4. Farandole

The finale, the farandole, incorporates the theme of the March of the Kings once again, this time in D minor. This is an expanded combination of numbers 21 and 23–24 of the original incidental music, in which the farandole appears first on its own. It is afterwards briefly combined with the march.




Recordings

Audio

Incidental Music
YearConductorOrchestra and ChoirNotesLabel
1957Albert WolffUnidentified studio orchestra
and choir
Dramatization by Max de Rieux with actors Mary Marquet, Berthe Bovy, Maurice Chambreuil, Pierre Larquey, Hubert Noël, Bernadette Lange, Robert Vidalin, Jacques Bernard, and Fernand SardouDecca LXT5229-30
Naxos 9.80151-52
1985Michel PlassonOrchestre du Capitole de Toulouse
Orfeon Donostiarra
Complete incidental musicEMI 47460
1986John Eliot GardinerOrchestre de l'Opera de LyonOrchestral excerpts Erato 45298
1991Robert Haydon ClarkConsort of London
Consort of Voices
Complete incidental musicCollins Classics 11412
1991Christopher HogwoodSaint Paul Chamber OrchestraSix orchestral excerpts edited by HogwoodDecca
1992Alexander RahbariBRTN Philharmonic Orchestra BrusselsComplete incidental musicKoch Discover International DICD 920115
1996Helmuth FroschauerKölner Rundfunkorchester
Kölner Rundfunkchor
Complete incidental music in a German language concert adaptation with narrators by Christoph SchwandtCapriccio 10815
2004Jean-Claude MalgoireOrchestre de Chambre National de Toulouse
Ensemble Vocal Jean Sourisse
Complete incidental music; with narrator Daniel MesguichAuvidis Valois
2004Christopher HogwoodKammerorchester BaselExcerpts Arte Nova

Suites
YearConductorOrchestraNotesLabel
1939Thomas BeechamLondon Philharmonic OrchestraFive movementsColumbia
1952Leopold StokowskiStokowski Symphony OrchestraSuites 1 & 2RCA Victor
1952André CluytensOrchestre National
de la Radiodiffusion Française
Suites 1 & 2EMI
1957Thomas BeechamRoyal Philharmonic OrchestraSuites 1 & 2EMI 67259
1958Herbert von KarajanPhilharmonia OrchestraSuites 1 & 2EMI
1966George SzellCleveland OrchestraSuites 1 & Farandole from second suiteColumbia
1967Charles MunchNew Philharmonia OrchestraSuites 1 & Farandole from second suiteDecca
1972Leonard BernsteinNew York Philharmonic OrchestraSuites 1 & 2Columbia
1979Neville MarrinerAcademy of St Martin in the FieldsSuites 1 & 2EMI
1981Claudio AbbadoLondon Symphony OrchestraSuites 1 & 2Deutsche Grammophon
1985Herbert von KarajanBerlin Philharmonic OrchestraSuites 1 & 2Deutsche Grammophon
1988Charles DutoitMontreal Symphony OrchestraSuites 1 & 2Decca
2008Marc MinkowskiLes Musiciens du Louvre
Chœur de l'opéra national de Lyon
Suites 1 & 2 and eight items from the incidental musicNaïve

Video

Films and television adaptations that use Bizet's music
YearTitleDirectorCastNotes
1930L'ArlésienneJacques de BaroncelliJim Gérald, Germaine Dermoz, Blanche Montel, José Noguéro, Charles Vanel, Maurice Schutz, Jean Mercanton Produced by Pathé-Natan
1942L'ArlésienneMarc AllégretRaimu, Gaby Morlay, Gisèle Pascal, Louis Jourdan, Fernand Charpin, Édouard Delmont, Charles Moulin, Roland Pégurier, Annie Toinon, Marcel Maupi Paul Paray conducted Bizet's score.
1967L'ArlésiennePierre BadelHenri Nassiet, Louise Conte, Paul Barge, Charles Vanel, Francine Ollivier, Pierre Hatet, Gérard Lecaillon, Berthe Bovy.Telefilm broadcast by the ORTF

Notable uses

Music from the L'Arlésienne suites was played extensively in "Hammer into Anvil", an episode of The Prisoner.
The "Carillon" and "Farandole" were used on two episodes of Disney Junior's Little Einsteins.
The "Carillon" was used in a very successful media campaign in Puerto Rico, launched in the late 1980s by the local importers of Finlandia vodka. It featured French-born photographer Guy Paizy playing the role of a sophisticated, womanizing classical orchestra conductor. The campaign is still remembered in the island nation, almost two decades after its inception.
Albanian dictator Enver Hoxha adopted the First Suite's "Prelude" as a military march during his reign.
The Japanese group Mihimaru GT uses the theme of the "Farandole" for their song "Theme of mihimaLIVE 2".
American songwriter, composer, and arranger Ben Homer created a jazz arrangement "Bizet Has His Day" from Georges Bizet's "Farandole" from L'Arlésienne,.
Jazz musician Bob James arranged and recorded a jazz version of "Farandole" on his album Two.
French choreographer Roland Petit created a ballet L'Arlésienne in 1974 which has been performed throughout the world, based on Daudet's short story and set against a Van Gogh landscape.
A rock version of "Farandole" appears in the Catherine video game by Atlus.
The song tune is also used in a character song called "England's Evil Summoning Song" from an anime called Hetalia: Axis Powers and was performed by Noriaki Sugiyama, who provided vocals for Arthur Kirkland/England.