I find this work endlessly fascinating but am usually left with a feeling of disappointment that there are only three songs, the last two accounting for only six minutes or so. Did Ravel plan a fourth? If so, why was it never completed or published? and if not, why such an unsatisfactory conclusion to the cycle?
Is it possible that the sexuality of the poet, Tristan Klingsor, is at the root of this? Klingsor was gay and his "orientalist" poetry is imbued with homo-eroticism. Ravel's choice of songs excludes the more explicit of the poems but his intention was to employ a tenor rather than a mezzo. He was persuaded by friends that this would cause tongues to wag- his own sexuality was always a mystery. Perhaps there was a concluding song that was considered too controversial.
But even as the songs stand, there is an overt homo-eroticism in the portrayal of the slave boy in La Flute Enchantee and the youth whom the traveller would like to have encountered in L'indifferent. I wonder whether Sheherazade is not only astonishingly beautiful music but also an insight into Ravel's sexuality?
Is it possible that the sexuality of the poet, Tristan Klingsor, is at the root of this? Klingsor was gay and his "orientalist" poetry is imbued with homo-eroticism. Ravel's choice of songs excludes the more explicit of the poems but his intention was to employ a tenor rather than a mezzo. He was persuaded by friends that this would cause tongues to wag- his own sexuality was always a mystery. Perhaps there was a concluding song that was considered too controversial.
But even as the songs stand, there is an overt homo-eroticism in the portrayal of the slave boy in La Flute Enchantee and the youth whom the traveller would like to have encountered in L'indifferent. I wonder whether Sheherazade is not only astonishingly beautiful music but also an insight into Ravel's sexuality?
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