Scene from the 1912 ballet Adélaïde, ou le langage des fleurs , the orchestral and choreographic incarnation of Ravel’s Valses nobles et sentimentales . The seven Valses nobles et sentimentales and their epilogue were originally composed for solo piano in 1911 . With this title, Maurice Ravel paid a conscious homage to Franz Schubert , who had published two collections of waltzes in 1823 under the titles Valses nobles and Valses sentimentales . Rather than imitation, Ravel sought a modern reimagining of the waltz, filtered through his own harmonic language and aesthetic sensibility. The work was first presented in Paris at a concert of anonymous compositions , a fashionable practice of the time. Many listeners reacted with hostility, disturbed by the deliberately abrasive harmonies and unexpected dissonances, never suspecting that the “wrong notes” belonged to one of France’s most admired composers. In 1912 , Ravel orchestrated the suite and transformed it into a ballet titl...
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