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1[[quoteright:190:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ravel_4006.jpg]]
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3[floatboxright:Influences:
4+ Emmanuel Chabrier, Music/FryderykChopin, François Couperin, Music/ClaudeDebussy, Gabriel Fauré, Music/GeorgeGershwin, Music/FranzLiszt, Music/WolfgangAmadeusMozart, Music/ModestMussorgsky, Creator/EdgarAllanPoe, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, Music/ErikSatie, Music/ArnoldSchoenberg, Johann Strauss Jr., Music/IgorStravinsky, Music/RichardWagner.
5]
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7Joseph Maurice Ravel is a French composer (7 March 1875 -- 28 December 1937), [[SmallReferencePools best known for his]] ''Music/{{Bolero}}'', despite his considering it a minor piece of work and joking that it had "no music in it".
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9He's popularly considered a cornerstone of the Impressionist movement in music, along with his fellow composer, Music/ClaudeDebussy, though neither of them considered themselves as Impressionists and were actually offended by the label. Nevertheless, his music contains very colourful tones and sounds, flows very freely, and is very atmospheric, suggesting to some an aural kinship with Impressionist painting. He also wrote other pieces that are best considered Neo-Classical[[note]]Classical music which follows traditional structure, but has modern harmonic elements in it[[/note]]. Regardless, he's considered as one of the major figures of early 20th century classical music, and is widely popular among listeners for his lush and beautiful, yet controlled[[note]]Unlike Debussy[[/note]] musical landscapes.
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11Notable pieces include ''Jeux D'Eau'', ''Theatre/DaphnisEtChloe'', ''Music/PavanePourUnInfanteDefunte'', ''Music/LeTombeauDeCouperin''[[note]]A neo-classical example[[/note]], and the Concerto in G for piano and orchestra[[note]]Influenced by Jazz[[/note]]. He wasn't quite prolific, but was able to build international fame because most of his music was widely acclaimed, both by serious critics and popular listeners.One of the last great composers faithful to the old classical style before everything classical becomes either atonal, serial, or minimalist. He was also a great supporter of Jazz, considering it to be worthy of being an artful musical genre, and the national music of the United States. As an atheist, Ravel disliked the religious themes of his colleagues and, as such, never composed any religious compositions. After the death of Debussy, he was the greatest French composer of his period.
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13Like his music, Ravel was reticent in nature. Interestingly known to have no (known) romantic or sexual relationships, much to the composer's chagrin and loneliness -- although he was surrounded by a large circle of faithful friends and followers, who later provided support during his last four years when he was affected by a neurological illness that prevented him from playing or writing any other music. After a failed operation, he died after falling into a coma. His death was greatly and unanimously grieved in the artistic circle - a year after his death, the ''Revue Musicale'' published a special edition containing around 100 articles paying homage to the late composer.
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15He was also an accomplished orchestrator, considered one of the best in the history of Western music; his orchestration of Music/ModestMussorgsky's suite ''Music/PicturesAtAnExhibition'' is [[AdaptationDisplacement arguably better known]] than the piano-only original.
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17A {{biopic}} film about his life, titled ''Boléro'' and starring Raphaël Personnaz in the title role, came out in 2024.
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19TropeNamer for the BoleroEffect.
20----
21!!Ravel's work includes examples of the following tropes:
22* AvianFlute:
23** His orchestration of the piano work ''Music/PicturesAtAnExhibition'' by Music/ModestMussorgsky contains a movement entitled "Ballet of the Unhatched Chicks." Its scoring prominently features two flutes playing grace-note figures that ornament running oboe and bassoon passages, the whole suggesting an energetic clutch of baby chicks.
24** ''Mother Goose Suite'' (''Ma Mere L'Oye'') exists in versions for piano four-hands and orchestra. The second movement, "Little Tom Thumb," depicts the title character's trail of bread crumbs being eaten by birds; the orchestral version scores its cheeping bird-like music for flutes and piccolo.
25%%* Myth/ClassicalMythology: The inspiration for the ballet (and two concert suites) ''Theatre/DaphnisEtChloe'', based on a romance by the Greek writer Creator/{{Longus}} dating from the second century AD.
26* BrokenRecord: "Bolero" repeats the same two melodies again and again, with only very subtle and gradual changes in the orchestration each time around. The snare drum has it the worst, repeating the exact same two-measure pattern nonstop for the entire piece.
27* GenreDeconstruction: The waltz genre gets deconstructed in ''La Valse''. It really shows in the music toward the end, the waltz becoming increasingly discordant in its harmony and disjointed in its rhythm and tempo, with an ending left unresolved. Although Ravel states otherwise, you'd be forgiven to think that this is all a portrayal of 19th Century Vienna and the destruction of its cultural icon status in UsefulNotes/WorldWarI.
28* GenreMashup: Applies to the jazz-influenced Concerto in G for piano and orchestra, as well as the second movement of his Sonata in G major for violin and piano, titled "Blues."
29* IronicallyDisabledArtist: Ravel's "Piano Concerto for the Left Hand" was commissioned by concert pianist Paul Wittgenstein[[note]]older brother of the philosopher Creator/LudwigWittgenstein[[/note]], who had his right arm amputated after a gunshot wound in UsefulNotes/WorldWarOne. (When pianist Alfred Cortot made an arrangement of the concerto for two hands, Ravel was furious and wrote letters to every orchestra in Europe forbidding them to play it.)
30%%* LastNoteNightmare: "Bolero" can come across as this. The last time the melody comes in, it is stronger, with much of the orchestra playing the theme, or counter melodies that seem wild. In some recordings, this section comes across as significantly louder. Some of the stated counter melodies also change the chords to dissonant ones. The song is major until then.
31* MundaneMadeAwesome: His ''Music/{{Bolero}}'' in essence consists of two swapped-off melodies repeated over and over again in varied instrumentations for 15 minutes, over a very rigid drumbeat, but it's nevertheless one of Ravel's most popular compositions and plenty exciting.
32* MusicGenreDissonance: Ravel's music is frequently lumped together with that of Music/ClaudeDebussy as "Impressionist." The latter did not consider himself as such, while Ravel thought the label applied to Debussy but not himself. ''Theatre/DaphnisEtChloe'' is the only Ravel work that arguably even fits the genre description at all.
33* NameAndName: ''Theatre/DaphnisEtChloe''.
34* NurseryRhyme: Forms the basis of the ballet suite ''Ma Mere L'Oye'' aka "Mother Goose."
35* OlderIsBetter: Like Debussy, Ravel generally avoided standard 18th and 19th century structures, though he did write pieces patterned on Baroque forms such as the suite (see ''Music/LeTombeauDeCouperin'', consisting of a Prélude, Fugue, Forlane, Rigaudon, Menuet, and Toccata) as well as the piano piece ''Music/MenuetAntique''.
36* PosthumousCollaboration: Ravel orchestrated Music/ModestMussorgsky's solo piano work ''Music/PicturesAtAnExhibition'' long after the latter's death. It is in fact far better known in this version than the original piano work or re-scoring attempts made by other composers are.
37* ProgressiveInstrumentation: ''Music/{{Bolero}}'' starts with a flute and snare drum and keeps adding more and more instruments, until the full orchestra is playing the same melody at the conclusion of the piece.
38* StandardSnippet: Applies to ''Music/{{Bolero}}'' of course, which has been quoted or invoked in movies such as ''Film/Ten1979'' and ''WesternAnimation/AllegroNonTroppo''. His music is also clearly the model for many film scores, given their vibrant scoring and polished yet non-academic sounding melodies and harmonic language.
39* TravelogueShow: Or travelogue work, in this case. Like several French composers, Ravel found Spanish culture exotic and alluring. Examples include the orchestra works ''Music/{{Bolero}}'' and ''Music/RapsodieEspagnol'', the "Alborada del grazioso" movement from ''Music/{{Miroirs}}'' for piano solo, and the opera ''L'Heure Espagnol''. Other pieces explored such exotic venues as Madagascar (''Music/ChansonsMadecasses''), China ("Laideronnette, impératrice des Pagodes" from ''Ma Mere L'Oye''), and the Middle East (''Music/{{Sheherazade}}'').
40* TruckDriversGearChange: The shift from C major to E major in the final minute of ''Music/{{Bolero}}'' (before shifting back to C major for the coda) may well have popularized the idea of modulation in a piece's latter stages to induce a mood change among pop music composers.
41
42!!Maurice Ravel in popular culture:
43* Music/FrankZappa named him in his influences list on his ''Music/FreakOut'' album. He also covered ''Music/{{Bolero}}'' on his album ''Music/TheBestBandYouNeverHeardInYourLife'' (1991).
44* ''Music/{{Bolero}}'' is the SignatureScene of the animated classic ''WesternAnimation/AllegroNonTroppo'', where it depicts the evolution of dinosaurs all marching to the boléro (a spoof of ''WesternAnimation/{{Fantasia}}''[='=]s sequence for ''Theatre/TheRiteOfSpring'').
45* In Creator/BlakeEdwards' film ''Film/Ten1979'', ''Music/{{Bolero}}'' is used for a seduction scene.
46* In the ''{{Series/MASH}}'' Season 8 episode "Morale Victory", a young concert pianist loses the use of his right hand due to an injury. Winchester uses Ravel's [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piano_Concerto_for_the_Left_Hand_(Ravel) Piano Concerto for the Left Hand]] to convince him that his career is not over.
47* Ravel appeared in season 11 of AudioPlay/BigFinishDoctorWho's ''Jago & Litefoot'' range.
48* In the [[UsefulNotes/OlympicGames 1984 Winter Olympics]], British figure skating duo Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean skated to [[https://youtu.be/t2zbbN4OL98 Bolero in the free dance.]] It won them the gold medal, having been awarded 12 perfect 6.0s and 6 5.9 scores, which included artistic scores of 6.0 from all judges, a feat that has never been matched since, and has become one of the most famous, and legendary ice dances of all time.
49* The ballets "[[https://youtu.be/hQntEkpCgmY Walking Mad]]" and "[[https://youtu.be/hCt6vIAWCjo Fandango]]" are performed to ''Music/{{Bolero}}''.
50* The director Zbigniew Rybczynski filmed an [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g1Vc2ZfVhf0 experimental short film]] about the UsefulNotes/SovietUnion titled ''Stairway to Lenin'', which is set to ''Bolero.''

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