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Published: Thursday, 19 September 2024 at 14:39 PM


Do you like Erik Satie? Well, the acid test – though it’s more like skimmed milk in this case – is Socrate. A 30-minute setting of over 2,000 words from the Platonic dialogues, Erik Satie’s ‘drame symphonique’ is deliberately featureless, neutral in expression, minimally colourful, scarcely symphonic and dramatic only by virtue of harmonic and instrumental abstinence. Having set out to create a work ‘as white and pure as antiquity’, Satie certainly succeeded.

‘How boring!’ you might think, and you would be in distinguished company. Ravel, for instance, who did much to establish Satie’s reputation as an authentic composer, flatly rejected Socrate.