Jump to content
This Site Uses Cookies. If You Want to Disable Cookies, Please See Your Browser Documentation. ×

The "Black Swan" pas de deux


Recommended Posts

Time to ask the music historians.

the poor swan vainly trying to attract his attention in the window--which is why almost concurrently with that image, and musically in the score, Odile imitates Odette's 'swan arms' to capture Siegfried's attention.

:) I've encountered this comment on the musical reference more than once, and no doubt Petipa intended Odile's port de bras to mirror Odette's in the window. But it's worth remembering that Tchaikovsky wrote this adagio for the first act, when neither Odette nor Odile were on the scene yet. I may seem musically obvious to us, but Tchaikovsky didn't conceive it that way.

Could Tchaikovsky have meant it as musical foreshadowing of characters that were to come later?

:) I didn't know that! I think I knew that Tchaikovsky's original adagio was too 'romantic' and I assumed that he then wrote up something new. Was the current adagio meant for the Act I pd3?

Most musical recordings of Swan Lake follow Tchaikovsky's score, which differs considerably from the 1895 production. The first-act pas de trois as we know it comes after the waltz and the scene with the dowager queen, and that's how Tchaikovsky wrote it. There is the intrada, followed by an andante. The latter is not used in Petipa's pd3, but is sometimes reassigned to the Siegfried to give him a sort of melancholy solo, usually at the end of Act 1. The three variations and coda we're familiar with follow.

Immediately after the pas de trois, comes a pas de deux, most of which has been recycled as the "Black Swan" pas de deux. There is a waltz, followed by the andante, which makes up the "Black Swan" adagio. It leads directly into an allegro, which we know as Siegfried's third-act solo, though the original has far more repeats. Then comes a brief waltz, which I've never heard used in any SL production, followed by a coda, the one usually used in the "Black Swan."

Tchaikovsky's own music for Odile and Siegfried was used by Balanchine in his Tchaikovsky Pas de Deux. Overall, it's probably superior music, but it's nowhere near as flashy or melodramatic as the music we know as the "Black Swan," so I can certainly understand Petipa's reasoning.

The question for you historians is, who was the first-act pas de deux intended for originally? The notes to one of my Swan Lake CDs state, not especially helpfully, "two courtiers perform a dance (whose music may be more familiar as the pas de deux often nowadays...given to Siegfried and Odile in Act III)." I've often wondered why Tchaikovsky should have assigned such flamboyant music to a pair of courtiers and far more subdued music for Odile's big seduction scene.

Link to comment

Well, Tchaikovsky didn't write the music for Pierina Legnani and her fouettés, so maybe he envisioned a subtler "enchantment" scene. Also, he was writing music that matched a pas de deux Minkus had written, measure for measure, and maybe Minkus's music had a similar quality.

(OT: Does anyone know what happened to the Minkus music?)

Link to comment

however tangled the question posted here, the answers are likely even more tangled.

actually, a music historian has presented thinking related to this subject, at length, in TCHAIKOVSKY'S BALLETS r.j.wiley tries to sort out the musical differences among the early 1877, and after, versions of SWAN LAKE and the re-written libretto and re-conceived choreography by petipa circa 1895.

there would seem to be little point in taking what passes today for the so-called 'black swan pas de deux' and petipa's work. my hunch is the grand old man of late imperial ballet would recogninze next to none of today's 'standard' version.

as wiley states: "What came to be known as the 'Black Swan pas de deux', which ends the divertissement with glittering , steely virtuosity in the ballerina's part, is in effect, as Petipa had planned it in his sketches, a pas de quatre demi d'action. Odile dances, Siegfried and another cavalier (not Benno) parnter her, and Rothbart acts." - p. 266. etc. etc. etc.

the problem with music historians, and this includes wiley to some effect, is that they tend to have too little performance-history knowledge of the ballet as it evolved, and therefore cannot always separate what is planned by the balletmaster, what was actually set as choreography for the different stagings, and what all got emended, adjusted for this or that ballerina, etc. etc.

Link to comment
Then comes a brief waltz, which I've never heard used in any SL production, followed by a coda, the one usually used in the "Black Swan."

I take that back. In Nureyev's POB production the waltz is used as a solo for Rothbart, which is quite sensible from a musical point of view, since it leads directly into the "Black Swan" coda.

Link to comment
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...