- Amy Beach composed Les rêves de Columbine: Suite française pour le Pianoforte (The Dreams of Columbina: French Suite for the Pianoforte) in 1906.1 It was first published in 1907.2
- This suite’s third movement, Valse amoreuse, is based on Beach’s art song “Le Secret,” Op. 14, No. 2.3
- Amy Beach performed the premiere of this work on April 17, 1907, at a morning recital devoted to Beach’s songs and piano music at the Hotel Tuileries in Boston.4
- Beach’s biographer Adrienne Fried Block suggests that Beach may have had ballet in mind when composing this work; several of the movements suggest dance forms.5
Movements
- La fée de la fontaine (The Fairy in the Fountain)
- Le prince gracieux (The Gracious Prince)
- Valse amoureuse (Waltz Lovers)
- Sous les étoiles (Under the Stars)
- Danse d’Arlequin (Arlequin’s Dance)6
Sources
- Adrienne Fried Block, Amy Beach: Passionate Victorian: The Life and Work of an American Composer 1867-1944 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1998), 127.
- Mrs. H.H.A. Beach, Les rêves de Columbine: Suite française pour le PianoforteAm (Boston: Arthur P. Schmidt, 1907).
- Ibid.
- Ibid.
- Ibid.
- Beach, Les rêves de Columbine: Suite française pour le Pianoforte
Cut IDs
42689