More than anyone else of his century, Emmanuel Chabrier (1841-94)
restored to French music the essential French traits of clarity,
emotional vitality, wit, and tenderness, at the time when the music of
the 1900s was struggling under a Wagnerian hangover on the one hand and
academic dryness on the other. So profound was Chabrier's talent that
Ravel especially named him as the composer who had influenced him more
than any other. Debussy was entranced by his music, and even Stravinsky
quotes from Chabrier's work.
Recent years have brought a greatly revived appreciation of the
composer's oeuvre, bringing his music to the attention of new audiences.
This compilation includes solo piano pieces by this French master, a
number of them long unavailable: Impromptu (1873), Valse (1878),
Ronde champêtre (1870s), 10 Pièces pittoresques (1880), Aubade
(1883), Habanera (1885), Joyeuse marche (1888), Ballabile, Caprice
and Feuillet d'album (1880s), and Bourrée fantasque (1891).
Accompanying these reprints of authoritative French editions are
illuminating notes on the music, the composer, the sources of this
updated edition, and a detailed analysis of variants in the music.