Product Description
Le Piccadilly is a charming piece by Erik Satie, composed in 1904. It is a short, lively work that is strongly influenced by ragtime music, a musical style that was popular in Paris at the time. The piece is written in ternary form, which means that it consists of three parts: a main theme, a trio and a repetition of the main theme. It is written in F major, with a trio in Bb major.
Satie was one of the first French composers to integrate American jazz elements into his music. Le Piccadilly is a good example of this early fusion of styles.
My arrangement is entitled In the style of an orchestrion. The orchestrion is one of the mechanical music automats. Its purpose was to imitate an entire orchestra and it was used, for example, in salons and large hotels for concert evenings or dance events. In 1851, a London newspaper described an automatic musical instrument called an orchestrion, which was developed in Dresden. It could imitate a complete brass band and also percussion - with timpani, drums, cymbals, tambourine and triangle. From the beginning of the 20th century, several companies also attempted to integrate violins into the orchestrion. With the advent of radio and electric record players, sales of orchestrions collapsed in the 1920s and production was soon discontinued.
In this production, I used only General MIDI instruments to recreate the sound of an orchestrion, which in its time was trying to recreate the sound of an orchestra. A double refraction. Have fun listening.
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