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1'''Who Pays the Piper?''' is a 45-minute "poem with music" written in 1983 by the British songwriter and musician Richard Stilgoe (who is most famous for collaborating with Creator/AndrewLloydWebber), and submitted as the BBC's entry to the 1991 Prix Monte-Carlo. The poem is written throughout in iambic pentameter in rhyming couplets, and is interspersed with classical music excerpts, some of which have humorously re-written lyrics. It details parts of the history of Western music, with an emphasis on the dilemmas arising from the business aspects of maintaining the artist. In its definitive realisation, the poem was narrated by Michael Williams, with music provided by the BBC Concert Orchestra conducted by Andrew Greenwood, and several singers including Stilgoe himself.
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4!!Tropes featured include:
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6* AffectionateParody: Of a large range of historical figures and musical tropes.
7* AnachronicOrder:
8** Played for laughs, and lampshaded. The work presents itself as going through the history of music, but after briefly beginning with an outline of the evolution of Pan's flute music to the music of Olivier Messiaen:
9--> Somehow I don't trust that scenario:
10--> [[ResetButton Back to square one, and have another go.]]
11--> In the beginning was no word, no note…
12** And slightly later:
13--> Again we go too fast – our headlong flight
14--> Has made us spring too quickly to the [[{{Pun}} Rite]].[[note]]The Rite of Spring by Music/IgorStravinsky.[[/note]]
15--> Pull back a bit, and give the folks a chance:
16--> So far we have the rhythm of the dance,
17--> And simple notes on string, and horn and pipe
18--> Enough, perhaps, for [[{{Understatement}} something of this type]]. ''(cue a Brandenberg Concerto by Music/JohannSebastianBach)''[[note]]Bach was from the eighteenth century and Stravinsky from the twentieth.[[/note]]
19* ApocalypseHow: [[ApocalypseHow/Class3b Class 3b]] is part of the poem's BittersweetEnding.
20* BitingTheHandHumour: Music/WolfgangAmadeusMozart's ''Theatre/TheMarriageOfFigaro'' is referred to as this, ridiculing (and undermining) the very same aristocracy that paid for its production.
21* BittersweetEnding: Humans burn themselves (and their environment) out while failing to resolve the eternal dilemma of how to maintain the artist with his "mission to explain, that happiness lies in my soul, in me - not cast in chipboard from a chainsawed tree." But on the other hand, music is free and continues forever, even after mankind has gone.
22* BlackComedy:
23** The segment on how composers died - Anton Webern shot by a "nervous GI" while smoking after curfew, Charles Alkan [[DroppedABridgeOnHim having a bookcase fall on him]],[[note]][[ArtisticLicenseHistory This theory is disputed]].[[/note]] Ernest Chausson [[DeathByFallingOver falling off his bicycle]], Alexander Scriabin dying from "[[SecretlyDying a septic pimple]]". The treatment of Jean-Baptiste Lully's death, however, takes the cake: after describing his death from [[BodyHorror gangrene after striking his foot]] with a baton during a performance, [[LyricalDissonance a light-hearted bar of Delibes pizzicato plays]], ending with rhythmically precise "thump [[PrecisionFStrike merde!]]"
24** This segment is introduced by a more stealthy example. The aria "Questa o quella" from Music/GiuseppeVerdi's ''Theatre/{{Rigoletto}}'' begins, but the tenor replaces the titular opening lyrics with the word "Salmonella", which the narrator promptly cuts off with the following:
25-->Now look, all this is getting out of hand!
26-->Be silent, Duke of Mantua! [[SophisticatedAsHell Shut up]], band!
27-->We must get back to pipers and to pay,
28-->Not bother when composers passed away,
29-->[[TheFoodPoisoningIncident or how]]!
30* BookEnds: The poem begins and ends with the sound of the wind over the Hindu Kush, respectively before and after the time of humans.
31* BrickJoke:
32** After mentioning how Claudio Monteverdi left Mantua for Venice, it is stated that "That Duke of Mantua's the self-same fella - whom [[Music/GiuseppeVerdi Verdi]] made perform [[Theatre/{{Rigoletto}} 'Questa o quella']]."[[note]]The Duke of Mantua being the character from Verdi's ''Theatre/{{Rigoletto}}'' who sings the aria "Questa o quella".[[/note]] Much later in the poem, after it's mentioned that Music/GioachinoRossini's father was an abattoir health inspector, "Questa o quella" begins playing, with the tenor singing "Salmonella" instead of the titular opening lyrics.
33** Music/FryderykChopin's biography song begins by saying that anyone who comes from his father's hometown of Nancy "must be rather strange". Later in the song, this is recalled in reference to Chopin's attraction to the unusual George Sand.
34* CasualKink: Implied in the relationship between Chopin and George Sand, as part of the Chopin biography song set to the tune of the "Minute Waltz".
35-->But Chopin (who’s father came from Nancy, you’ll recall)
36-->Thought George was the sort of girl he fancied after all
37-->And took her straight up to his room to find out
38-->Who did what, [[NoodleImplements with what,]] [[HeadTiltinglyKinky and how,]] to whom.
39-->[[SexyDiscretionShot That lasted till]] the summer of eighteen-forty-seven...
40* CreationStory: The beginning of the poem plays this for laughs, even taking its cue from Literature/TheBible:
41--> In the beginning was no word, no note.
42--> No symphonies were heard, and no-one wrote
43--> Suite number four for alto flute in E.
44--> There were no flutes, no suites one, two and three.
45* DeadpanSnarker: This tone is adopted throughout the poem; the history of opera, of specific composers and their stories, is treated with the utmost snark.
46* DoubleEntendre: The Chopin biography song ends with one: "…nobody can expect to become bronzed and healthy, just by [[SexualEuphemism lying on the Sand]]."[[note]]George Sand was Chopin's long-term girlfriend.[[/note]]
47* FaunsAndSatyrs: [[Myth/ClassicalMythology Pan]] is the central focus in the beginning of the story, and is credited with first discovering the mechanics of pipes (which he played to "ape the chortling birds"), strings (through the sound of his bowstring), percussion (his heartbeat), and harmonics.
48* GreenAesop: The material near the end of the poem, and especially the rueful re-written lyrics to Villa Lobos' "Bachianos Brazileiras" ("Hear the chainsaws singing in the forests of Brazil…") verge on being this.
49* LadyLooksLikeADude: The Chopin song says of George Sand that she would "…habitually wear trousers, collar, tie and crew-cut hair."
50* MidWordRhyme: The Chopin song rhyms "Berlin" with "Paganin-i", and "cigars" with "trous-ers".
51* MoodWhiplash: The abrupt switch from the ominous background of [[Music/GustavHolst Mars from "the planets"]] to the montage of "Berlin, and blues" counts as this.
52* PatterSong: The biography of Music/FryderykChopin set to the tune of Chopin's Minute Waltz.
53* PlayingATree: Discussed in the rewritten lyrics to "Ombra mai fu" from ''Serse'' by Music/GeorgeFredericHandel:
54-->I stand completely still
55-->From curtain up, until
56-->Act five, scene three.
57* ShoutOut: To his famous collaborator, Creator/AndrewLloydWebber:
58--> Of course there’s freedom in the private sector -
59--> No self-respecting managing director
60--> Would ever dare to tell the Sinfonietta
61--> "Drop Stockhausen – we like Lloyd Webber better".
62* SophisticatedAsHell: Many times, poetic or sophisticated language is juxtaposed with slang for laughs. For example, "Be silent, Duke of Mantua; shut up, band!", or Music/RichardWagner being called a "jerk".
63* TakeThat:
64** Stilgoe's many targets include operas by Music/GeorgeFredericHandel:
65--> Accompanied by Hanoverian snoring
66--> for Handel operas, honestly, are boring.
67** And Music/RichardWagner:
68--> And unaware that Wagner was a jerk,
69--> King Ludwig paid, and got this wonderous work.
70** And the pizzicato number from Leo Delibes' ''Sylvia'':
71--> I know that's by Delibes, and not by Lully,
72--> but Lully didn't write a tune that [[PainfulRhyme silly!]]
73* TastesLikeChicken: Inverted at the end of "Die Forelle" by Music/FranzSchubert, in which the lyrics are rewritten to parody Schubert's business difficulties: they tell the story of the owners of a failing free-range chicken business who tried to supplement their income by breeding trout in a pond for people to come and fish, and when that enterprise fails, finally finding success by grinding the fish up into powder to use as chicken feed:
74-->It didn't cost us nothing,
75-->So chicken is now a cheaper dish.
76-->But that is why, [[ProductPlacement at Tesco's,]]
77-->The chicken tastes of fish.
78* TitleDrop:
79--> And there is music's problem, I'm afraid -
80--> Who pays the piper? For he must be paid.

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