Satie, Erik The French composer ErikSatie was born on May 17, 1866,
and died on July 1, 1925, was the son of an English mother and a
Parisian music publisher. He entered the Paris Conservatory in 1879 but
failed to benefit from academic education, which he embarked on again
only in his 40th year, when he enrolled as a pupil of Vincent d'Indy and
Albert Roussel at the Schola Cantorum. Long before that, however, he
had composed a number of short piano pieces, whose eccentric titles and
unfashionable and yet convincing simplicity of melody were matched by
an individual sense of harmony. It is still a moot point whether Satie got
his harmonic ideas from his fellow student and friend Claude Debussy, or
whether the debt was on Debussy's side. It is quite clear, however, that
Satie's tasteful principles influenced Debussy in the composition of his
opera Pelleas et Melisande and that Satie was the main influence in
helping Debussy to free himself from the musical domination of Richard
Wagner. Satie became interested in plainsong through his association
with a so-called Rosicrucian group, while he earned his living as a cafe
pianist in Montmartre.Satie was a conscious eccentric and a determined
enemy of all establishments, including the musical. The comical titles
that he attached to his small piano pieces are characteristic of the
Bohemian wit in the Paris of his day. Irony and a deceptively childlike
attitude, a dislike for pomposity of all kinds, and an instinctive
secretiveness were hallmarks of both the man and his music. In 1916,
Satie was befriended by Jean Cocteau and wrote the music for a ballet,
Parade, on which Pablo Picasso and Leonid Massine also collaborated.
By far the most important of Satie's works is Socrate , an harsh setting for
four sopranos and chamber orchestra of Plato's account of the death of
Socrates. The young composers who formed the essentially Parisian
group known as Les Six regarded Satie as a kind of tutelary genius, and
in 1923 one of them, Darius Milhaud, tried to found an "Ecole d'Arcueil,"
named for the obscure Paris suburb where Satie lived in extreme
poverty.
. Satie, Erik The French composer Erik Satie was born on May 17, 1866,
and died on July 1, 1925,. clear, however, that
Satie& apos;s tasteful principles influenced Debussy in the composition of his
opera Pelleas et Melisande and that Satie was the main