Claude Debussy
Clair de Lune, Impressionist Composer, Father of Modern Music
The Impressionist Leo
Claude Debussy broke free from the rules of European classical music so completely that he created an entirely new way of hearing the world. His Clair de Lune is perhaps the most purely beautiful piano piece ever written. His Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun changed music as fundamentally as Einstein changed physics. He was called undisciplined; he was actually operating at a frequency others couldn’t hear.
Leo Legacy
- Clair de Lune: Third movement of Suite bergamasque — the most beloved piano piece of its era
- Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun: 1894 — recognized as the beginning of modern music
- La Mer: 1905 — orchestral triptych of astonishing sensory imagination
- Impressionism: Named after a critical dismissal — he turned the insult into a movement
Debussy’s Leo originality was so extreme that critics had to invent a new category to dismiss it — and then history adopted it as a compliment.
“Music is the silence between the notes.”