Satie, Erik

Satie, Erik
orig. Eric Alfred Leslie Satie

born May 17, 1866, Honfleur, Calvados, France
died July 1, 1925, Paris

French composer.

He studied at the Paris Conservatoire (1879–82) but dropped out. From 1888 he played piano at the café Le Chat Noir; he became associated with the Rosicrucian movement in about 1890 and wrote several works under its influence. Living in austere poverty in a working-class district, he began to gain prominence in 1911, when he was lauded as a forerunner of modern music; his admirers included Claude Debussy, Jean Cocteau, and the group of composers known as Les Six. Satie's music represents the first definite break with 19th-century French Romanticism; it also stands in opposition to Impressionism (a movement he frequently mocked). His mostly short piano works are spare and unconventional, and they characteristically take the form of parody, with flippant titles such as Three Pieces in the Form of a Pear (1903).

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▪ French composer
in full  Erik-Alfred-Leslie Satie  
born May 17, 1866, Honfleur, Calvados, France
died July 1, 1925, Paris

      French composer whose spare, unconventional, often witty style exerted a major influence on 20th-century music, particularly in France.

      Satie studied at the Paris Conservatory, dropped out, and later worked as a café pianist. About 1890 he became associated with the Rosicrucian movement and wrote several works under its influence, notably the Messe des pauvres (composed 1895; Mass of the Poor). In 1893, when he was 27, Satie had a stormy affair with the painter Suzanne Valadon (Valadon, Suzanne). From 1898 he lived alone in Arcueil, a Paris suburb, cultivating an eccentric mode of life and permitting no one to enter his apartment. Beginning in 1905 he studied at the Schola Cantorum under Vincent d'Indy (Indy, Vincent d') and Albert Roussel (Roussel, Albert) for three years. About 1917 the group of young composers known as Les Six (Six, Les) adopted him as their patron saint. Later the School of Arcueil, a group including Darius Milhaud, Henri Sauguet, and Roger Désormiere, was formed in his honour.

      Satie's music represents the first definite break with 19th-century French Romanticism; it also stands in opposition to the works of composer Claude Debussy (Debussy, Claude). Closely allied to the Dada and Surrealist movements in art, it refuses to become involved with grandiose sentiment or transcendent significance, disregards traditional forms and tonal structures, and characteristically takes the form of parody, with flippant titles, such as Trois morceaux en forme de poire (1903; Three Pieces in the Shape of a Pear) and Embryons Desséchés (1913; Desiccated Embryos), and directions to the player such as “with much illness” or “light as an egg,” meant to mock works such as Debussy's preludes.

      Satie's flippancy and eccentricity, an intimate part of his musical aesthetic, epitomized the avant-garde ideal of a fusion of art and life into an often startling but unified personality. He sought to strip pretentiousness and sentimentality from music and thereby reveal an austere essence. This desire is reflected in piano pieces such as Trois Gnossiennes (1890), notated without bar lines or key signatures. Other early piano pieces, such as Trois Sarabandes (1887) and Trois Gymnopédies (1888), use then-novel chords that reveal him as a pioneer in harmony. His ballet Parade (1917; choreographed by Léonide Massine, scenario by Jean Cocteau, stage design and costumes by Pablo Picasso) was scored for typewriters, sirens, airplane propellers, ticker tape, and a lottery wheel and anticipated the use of jazz materials by Igor Stravinsky (Stravinsky, Igor) and others. The word Surrealism was used for the first time in Guillaume Apollinaire's program notes for Parade. Satie's masterpiece, Socrate for four sopranos and chamber orchestra (1918), is based on the dialogues of Plato. His last, completely serious piano works are the five Nocturnes (1919). Satie's ballet Relâche (1924) contains a Surrealistic film sequence by René Clair; the film score Entr'acte, or Cinéma, serves as an example of his ideal background, or “furniture,” music.

      Satie was dismissed as a charlatan by musicians who misunderstood his irreverence and wit. They also deplored the nonmusical influences in his life—during his last 10 years his best friends were painters, many of whom he had met while a café pianist. Satie was nonetheless deeply admired by composers of the rank of Darius Milhaud, Maurice Ravel, and, in particular, Claude Debussy—of whom he was an intimate friend for close to 30 years. His influence on French composers of the early 20th century and on the later school of Neoclassicism was profound.

Additional Reading
General biographies are Pierre-Daniel Templier, Erik Satie (1969, reprinted 1980; originally published in French, 1932); Ornella Volta, Erik Satie, trans. by Simon Pleasance (1997, originally published in French, 1979); and Alan M. Gillmor, Erik Satie (1988, reissued 1992). His works are examined in Robert Orledge, Satie the Composer (1990). Particular aspects of his life are emphasized in Ornella Volta (ed.), Erik Satie Seen Through His Letters, trans. from French (1989, reprinted 1994); and Steven Moore Whiting, Satie the Bohemian: From Cabaret to Concert Hall (1999). The context of Satie's music is treated in Nancy Lynn Perloff, Art and the Everyday: Popular Entertainment and the Circle of Erik Satie (1991, reissued 1993); and Robert Orledge (compiler and ed.), Satie Remembered (1995).

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