Jump to Navigation Jump to Content

  • LA Phil
  • Hollywood Bowl

Log in to Your Account

LA Phil

  • Concert Tickets
    • Concert Tickets
    • Calendar
    • 2013/14 Season Schedule
    • 2012/13 Season Schedule
    • Seating Chart
    • Season Brochure
    • Subscribe
    • Box Office Info and Policies
    • Groups 10+
    • Special Offers
    • LA Phil Student Insiders
    • Enriquece Tu Vida
    • Gift Cards
    • Donate Your Tickets
    • Customer Service
  • Visit
    • Visit
    • FAQ
    • Directions
    • Parking Map
    • Tours
    • Preguntas frecuentes
    • Accessibility Information
    • Dining and Hotels
  • Watch + Listen
    • Watch + Listen
    • Broadcasts
    • Recordings and Releases
    • LA Phil Videos
  • Blog
    • 2013 Tour
    • The Mahler Project
    • 2011 European Tour
    • 2010 US Tour
    • 2008 Asia Tour
    • 2007 European Tour
  • Connect
    • Connect
    • Email Newsletters
    • LA Phil Mobile
    • RSS Feeds
    • Social Media
  • Philpedia
    • Overview
    • The Los Angeles Philharmonic
    • Gustavo Dudamel
    • Lionel Bringuier
    • John Adams
    • Esa-Pekka Salonen
    • Herbie Hancock
    • History of the Los Angeles Philharmonic
    • Dudamel Fellows
    • Los Angeles Philharmonic Archives
    • About Walt Disney Concert Hall
    • Music and Musicians Database
    • Art & Music Links
    • Hollywood Bowl Orchestra
    • LA Phil Auditions
  • Education
    • Education
    • Program Directory
    • Youth Orchestra LA (YOLA)
    • Take a Stand
    • Concerts for Youth
    • School Programs
    • Young Musicians
    • Teaching Artists
    • Upbeat Live
    • Education Funders
    • Contact Us
  • Give
    • Give
    • Individual Donors
    • Corporate, Foundations, and Government Funders
    • Endowment & Planned Giving
    • Volunteer
    • Special Events
    • Contact
  • Shop
    • Gustavo Dudamel
    • Walt Disney Concert Hall
    • Music CDs & DVDs
    • Books
    • Jewelry & Accessories
    • Gifts
    • Children's Section
    • Hollywood Bowl
    • Sale
    • Gift with Purchase
    • Gift Wrap

You are here

Home » Philpedia » Music and Musicians Database

Share

About the Piece

En blanc et noir

Claude Debussy

Last Modified: May 14, 2012

In addition to his numerous duo-piano arrangements, Debussy wrote two of his own works for two pianos: Lindaraja is considered a warm-up to his masterpiece in this form, En blanc et noir (In black and white).

The composer wrote of En blanc et noir that the movements "derive their color and feeling merely from the sonority of the piano." Debussy insisted the work was not a comment on the first World War, but since virtually all of his correspondence from this period indicates a near obsession with the subject, it's hard to image the music is just about the piano. In fact, the title's coy reference to the colors of the piano keys could be heard as a double entendre, perhaps commenting on the abject ghastliness Debussy saw in war. The movements' titles and the recognizable musical associations in the work suggest that this is the case. The central movement bears a dedication to the memory of a French army officer who had recently been killed in action, and there is no mistaking the music's suggestions of distant bugle calls and quiet military drum rhythms.

The first movement opens with a layering of contrapuntal figures that rain down exuberant hopefulness, then devolves into a jagged, martial motif. The two ideas push against each other, becoming more and more compressed and ultimately fusing into a giant C-major chord. The middle movement depicts a profound sense of loss through long spaces of silence; long, still, low chords; a quiet, single-voice motive; and a high-register chime reminiscent of a distant drum beat. This movement's central section, more extroverted and noble, quotes liberally the familiar Lutheran chorale Ein feste Burg (A mighty fortress) over the rubble and chaos of dissonant harmonies and rumbling bass patterns. The last, dedicated to Stravinsky, brings together the variety of textures and motives employed in the first two movements, delving at last into the rich possibilities of the piano with a black-and-white purity of musical expression.

- Meg Ryan is the Los Angeles Philharmonic Association's Publications Assistant.

  • Overview
  • The Los Angeles Philharmonic
  • Gustavo Dudamel
  • Lionel Bringuier
  • John Adams
  • Esa-Pekka Salonen
  • Herbie Hancock
  • History of the Los Angeles Philharmonic
    • KCRW Radio Documentaries
  • Dudamel Fellows
    • Dudamel Fellows 2011/12
  • Los Angeles Philharmonic Archives
  • About Walt Disney Concert Hall
  • Music and Musicians Database
    • Browse Music by Title
    • Browse Music by Composer
    • Browse Composers
    • Browse Artists
    • Browse LA Phil Musicians
    • Browse Conductors
  • Art & Music Links
  • Hollywood Bowl Orchestra
    • Musician Roster
  • LA Phil Auditions
  • Site Map
  • About
  • Press
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us

© 2013 Los Angeles Philharmonic Association. All rights reserved.

Back to Top