Template:Short description Template:Redirect Template:Italic title {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, or Tale of the Soldier (as it was first published),<ref name="IMSLP 2018">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> is an hour-long 1918 theatrical work to be "read, played and danced ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}})" by three actors, one or more dancers, and a septet of instruments. Its music is by Igor Stravinsky, its libretto, in French, by Swiss writer Charles Ferdinand Ramuz; the two men conceived it together, their basis being the Russian tale The Runaway Soldier and the Devil in the collection of Alexander Afanasyev.Template:Sfn

MusicEdit

Histoire du soldat is scored for clarinet, bassoon, cornet (often played on trumpet), trombone, percussion, violin and double bass. The music is rife with changing time-signatures and for this reason is commonly, though not always, performed with a conductor.

RolesEdit

Ramuz relates the parable of a soldier who trades his violin to the Devil in return for vast economic gain by means of three actors: the Narrator, who both narrates and impersonates several minor characters; the Devil, who assumes various guises; and the Soldier himself, Joseph, from no army identified. A dancer has the usually silent role of the Princess.

First performancesEdit

Ernest Ansermet conducted the premiere on 28 September 1918 in Lausanne with the support of Swiss philanthropist Werner Reinhart, to whom Stravinsky gifted the manuscript and issued the dedication.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Stephen Walsh, "The composer, the antiquarian and the go-between: Stravinsky and the Rosenthals, The Musical Times, [northern] Spring 2007, from findarticles.com, retrieved 14 July 2009</ref>

Edward Clark, Stravinsky's friend and Ansermet's former assistant at the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, conducted the 1926 British premiere in Newcastle upon Tyne and three staged London performances the next July.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

SuitesEdit

Reinhart continued his support of Stravinsky's work in 1919 by funding a series of concerts of his recent chamber music.<ref>Dr. Richard E. Rodda, "Three Pieces for Clarinet", Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center program notes, 2007 Template:Webarchive on chambermusicsociety.org, retrieved 14 July 2009</ref> These included a suite of five numbers from Histoire du soldat arranged for clarinet, violin, and piano in a nod to Reinhart, an amateur clarinetist.<ref>Robert Bridge, "L'Histoire Du Soldat (The Soldier's Tale): A Brief Historical Overview", 17 May 1994 Template:Webarchive on sunyocc.edu, retrieved 14 July 2009</ref> This was first performed on 8 November 1919, also in Lausanne. Stravinsky later created a suite scored for all seven original instruments.<ref>Susan Halpern, "Recital Notes for January 29, 2008" from A Musical Feast Template:Webarchive on amusicalfeast.com, retrieved 14 July 2009</ref>

StructureEdit

The work's sixteen narrative and instrumental sections alternate and are not intended to overlap.

Part 1Edit

Joseph Duprat, the Soldier, is walking exhausted toward his hometown on a 15-day leave, pack in tow. (Marche du soldat / The Soldier's March). He rests by a stream. From his pack he takes out his lucky St. Joseph medallion, then a mirror, next a picture of his fiancée, and finally his violin. He begins to play. (Petits airs au bord du ruisseau / Airs by the Stream). The Devil appears, disguised as an old man carrying a butterfly net. Joseph does not notice him but continues to play. The Devil sneaks up from behind and startles him.

The Devil asks Joseph to sell him his violin. When Joseph refuses he offers him a book that he says will lead to untold wealth. Joseph does not understand the book, but the Devil convinces him it is worth more than his cheap violin. Joseph realizes the book contains events that happen in the future. He accepts the Devil's offer to spend three days at the Devil's home in great luxury to learn about the book and teach the Devil the violin. After this term the Devil takes Joseph the rest of his way home. (Reprise: Marche du soldat).

But once in his hometown Joseph notices something strange: everyone runs away as they see him. He arrives at his fiancée's house only to find her with husband and children. Finally he realizes that three years, not three days, have passed and that his former neighbors and friends think he's a ghost. (Pastorale).

Joseph sees the Devil in disguise as a cattle merchant and confronts him. The Devil tries to calm Joseph by reminding him of the book's power: Joseph started off as a peddler but with the knowledge gained from the book quickly amassed wealth. The Soldier realizes this material wealth means nothing. All he wants is what he had before, the things everyone else has. (Reprise: Petits airs). Agitated, he leafs through the book for a solution, in vain.

The Devil arrives, now disguised as an old woman peddler. She offers for sale a lucky medallion, a mirror, a picture of a woman, and then a violin. Joseph moves to buy the violin, but when she hands it over he finds he can no longer play: it makes no sound. (Reprise: Petits airs). He hurls it away and tears up the book.

Part 2Edit

Joseph leaves his home with nothing and marches through town. (Reprise: Marche du soldat). He arrives at an inn where he hears the news that the king's daughter is sick, and whoever can raise her from her bed will be given her hand in marriage. He makes his way to the palace. (Marche royale / Royal March).

The Devil is already at the palace disguised as a virtuoso violinist. Joseph turns over some cards and gets an air of confidence when they are all hearts. The Devil makes his presence known, clutching the violin to his chest, and taunts Joseph. The Narrator informs Joseph that the Devil still controls him because he retains the Devil's money, and if he can lose all of it to the Devil in a card game he will be free.

This the Soldier does. He then takes the violin and plays. (Petit concert / Little Concert). He triumphantly marches into the Princess's chambers where he plays another tune. Miraculously the music revives her, and she begins a sequence of dances. (Trois danses / Three Dances: Tango, Waltz, Ragtime).

As the two embrace the Devil arrives, for the first time undisguised. Joseph shields the Princess. He realizes he can defeat the Devil by playing his violin. (Danse du diable / Dance of the Devil). Unable to resist the music, the Devil begins to contort, is exhausted, and finally falls to the ground. Joseph takes the Princess's hand and together they drag the Devil away before falling into each other's arms. (Petit choral / Little Chorale).

But the Devil pops his head in and begins to torment the couple, warning that Joseph may not leave the palace without the Devil regaining control of him. (Couplets du diable / The Devil's Couplets).

ConclusionEdit

Over the Grand choral / Great Chorale, the Narrator states the moral:

lang}}</poem> <poem>You must not seek to add

To what you have, what you once had; You have no right to share What you are with what you were. No one can have it all: That is forbidden; You must learn to choose between. One happy thing is every happy thing; Two, is as if they had never been.</poem>

The work ends with Joseph crossing the frontier-post, a boundary not to be crossed, after being tempted by the ideal of having both his wife and his mother. The Devil is waiting as Joseph turns back to find his Princess, now gone. (Marche triomphale du diable / The Devil's Triumphant March): violin and percussion entwined in a rhythmic duel, the final measures played solely by the percussionist; here the score is marked decrescendo to the end, although this may be changed crescendo when performing the Suite.

Translations into English and GermanEdit

The original French text by Ramuz has been translated into English by Michael Flanders and Kitty Black, and into German by the poet Hans Reinhart.Template:Sfn

Musical influencesEdit

Histoire du soldat shows Stravinsky's absorption of a wide range of musical influences: the pasodoble in the Marche royale; the tango, the waltz and ragtime, as played by Joseph to cure the Princess; klezmer in the instrumentation and textures; Luther's Ein feste Burg in the Petit choral; and Bach in the Grand choral. According to the musicologist Danick Trottier, these influences are linked to a certain extent to Stravinsky's experiences and first successes in the cosmopolitan Paris of the early 1910s, since the capital of France was a confluence-point for a variety of artists and musicians during La Belle Époque.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Performance historyEdit

World premiere
Lausanne, Switzerland, 28 September 1918, conducted by Ernest Ansermet. Cast: Gabriel Rosset as the Soldier, Jean Villard as the Devil (speaking parts), and Elie Gagnebin as the Narrator. Choreography by Georges Pitoëff, who danced in the role of the Devil opposite his wife Ludmilla as the Princess. Sets and costumes by René Auberjonois.
UK
Concert Suite: 1920, London, conducted by Ernest Ansermet.
Full staging, 1926, Newcastle upon Tyne, conducted by Edward Clark. Three further fully staged performances in London in July 1927.
France
Full staging (by Sergei Diaghilev), Paris, 1924.
Germany
1924: Frankfurt, and Wiesbaden (conducted by Otto Klemperer).
US
Ballet version: New York City Opera, New York State Theater, Lincoln Center: 1978: Directed by Frank Corsaro and Gardner Compton (who also choreographed), conducted by Imre Palló. Scenic and costume design by Victor Capecce; lighting design by Ken Billington. Barry Bostwick played the title role, and the Princess was portrayed by Mercedes Ellington. John Lankston and the New York City Opera Dancers completed the cast. (Presented on a triple bill with La voix humaine and The Impresario.)<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Balletmaster Peter Martins created the Suite from L'Histoire du Soldat for New York City Ballet. The premiere was at the New York State Theater, Lincoln Center on 30 January 1981 with the original cast consisting of Darci Kistler, Kyra Nichols, Ib Andersen, Heather Watts, Jean-Pierre Frohlich, Victor Castelli, Bart Cook, and Daniel Duell.<ref>"Historic Soldat, New Work by Martins" by Anna Kisselgoff, The New York Times, 31 January 1981. Retrieved 18 October 2009</ref> The Martins ballet was given again May 1987<ref>Jennifer Dunning, "The City Ballet in Histoire du Soldat, The New York Times, 17 May 1987. Retrieved 18 October 2009</ref> and revived in May 1999 when it was reviewed by Jack Anderson.<ref>"Dance; Bouncy Stravinsky Music For a Playful Conversation", The New York Times, 17 May 1999. Retrieved 18 October 2009</ref>
Canada
Narrated version: Montreal Festivals, 1949.
Staged version: Stratford Shakespearean Festival, 1955: directed by Douglas Campbell. Costume design by Clarence Wilson. Lillian Jarvis as the Princess, Marcel Marceau as the Devil, Douglas Rain as the Soldier, narrated by William Needles.

RecordingsEdit

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AdaptationsEdit

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  • In 2022, playwright Carol Wolf was commissioned by the Peninsula Symphony of Los Altos, California to write an updated libretto for A Soldier's Tale. The new libretto tells the story of an American soldier who meets Death on the road in Iraq. It was performed on November 13, 2022 with choreography by Arielle Cole, and danced by Cole's company, ArcTangent.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • In 2024, poet Titilope Sonuga wrote Sankofa: The Soldier's Tale Retold, performed by the Art of Time Ensemble in Toronto. This version tells the story of a fictional soldier from the No. 2 Construction Battalion, the only Canadian battalion composed of Black soldiers to serve in the First World War, and his struggles to be accepted by the army and then his trauma after, as he reclaims what was forgotten (the African concept of Sankofa).<ref name="Ghosal 2024">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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ReferencesEdit

Notes Template:Reflist Sources

Further readingEdit

External linksEdit

Template:Igor Stravinsky Template:Authority control