Ma mère l'Oye
Ma mère l'Oye is a suite by French composer Maurice Ravel. The piece was originally written as a five-movement piano duet in 1910. In 1911, Ravel orchestrated the work.
Piano versions
Ravel originally wrote Ma mère l'Oye as a piano duet for the Godebski children, Mimi and Jean, ages 6 and 7. Ravel dedicated this work for four hands to the children. Jeanne Leleu and Geneviève Durony premiered the work at the first concert of the Société musicale indépendante on 20 April 1910.The piece was transcribed for solo piano by Ravel's friend Jacques Charlot the same year as it was published ; the first movement of Ravel's Le tombeau de Couperin was dedicated to Charlot's memory after his death in World War I.
Both piano versions bear the subtitle "cinq pièces enfantines". The five pieces are:
- Pavane de la Belle au bois dormant: Lent
- Petit Poucet: Très modéré
- Laideronnette, impératrice des pagodes: Mouvt de marche
- Les entretiens de la belle et de la bête: Mouvt de valse très modéré
- Le jardin féerique: Lent et grave
On several of the scores, Ravel included quotes to indicate clearly what he is trying to invoke. For example, for the second piece, he writes:
Orchestrated version
In 1911, Ravel orchestrated the five-piece suite. This form is the most frequently heard today.Later the same year, he also expanded it into a ballet, separating the five initial pieces with four new interludes and adding two movements at the start, Prélude and Danse du rouet et scène. The ballet premiered on 29 January 1912 at the Théâtre des Arts in Paris. The eleven numbers are:
Instrumentation
Ma mère l'Oye is scored for an orchestra with the following instruments:;Woodwinds
;Brass
;Percussion
;Keyboards
;Strings
In popular culture
- On his 1974 album, So What, American guitarist Joe Walsh recorded the first piano movement, which he simply titled "Pavanne", on the synthesizer.
- On his 1980 album, Bolero, Japanese synthesizer artist Isao Tomita recorded the five movements of the piano version.
- In the 1984 TV short Jean Shepherd on Route 1... and Other Major Thoroughfares, an orchestral version of Le jardin féerique plays in the background while Shepherd narrates a segment about U.S. Route 22.
- The 1993 album Audrey Hepburn's Enchanted Tales includes selections from the suite.
- In the 2007 anime Clannad, the characters choose "Ma mére l'oye" as the background music for their school play.
- The 2017 film Call Me by Your Name makes extensive use of a section of Le jardin féerique,
- In the 2021 film The Worst Person in the World, a section of Les entretiens de la belle et de la bete plays while Julie freezes time to meet with Eivind at a cafe.
- The Korean Drama "Sky Castle" employs Bolero and The Fairy Garden throughout the 20 episode saga.
- In Rick Owens' Fall/Winter 2024 women's show "Porterville", a looping synthesizer cover of the first movement was used throughout.