Stéphane Delplace (1953)
by
Grégoire Hetzel
After having begun the piano at a very young age, Delplace,
alone, without guidance, without scores, continues through
improvisation to discover music.
At the age of seventeen, he decides to dedicate himself
completely to music, and while continuing with his studies
of piano and organ, begins to compose.
The seeming pain of dissonance, the beauty of linear
conflict between voices, the harmonies and disharmonies
that they create never cease to fascinate him.
His discovery of Bach’s Fantasy in G major for organ is a
definitive turning point.
Delplace relentlessly deepens his mastery of composition
and attends the Conservatoire National de Musique de Paris,
where he studies counterpoint, harmony, fugue, and
orchestration. But, as he readily admits, it is
through studying the works of the composers he most admires
(Bach, Brahms, Ravel...) that he shapes his musical
persona.
In the early nineteen-eighties, while harmonizing the whole
tone scale in opposition to the modal debussy-esque
solution, he discovers a singular tonal harmonic
configuration out of which many of his works were born,
such as the oratorio De Sibilla (adapted from Virgil),
premiered in Saint-Germain des Prés in 1990, as well as the
Prelude et Fugue VI in B flat minor.
Comforted by the idea that tonal language has not been
exhausted of its possibilities, the composer henceforth
looks for the expressive force of clear compositional
language, while always being careful not to sacrifice
himself to any form of progressivism.
The Klavierstücke for piano (1995-99, ed. Esching), the
double concerto Laus Vitae (1998), the Tombeau de Ravel,
for full orchestra (1997), Odi et Amo (adapted from
Catulle) or the Variations dans le Ton de Sol for solo
cello (1995), to cite only a few of his works, all share
the quest for harmonically painful beauty and for the
counterpoint that it subjugates.
Several obsessions haunt these works which are true
examples of the author’s language: The alteration of
weak scale degrees, brought out as if Delplace, without
leaving the tonal ‘solar system’, wished to explore the
farthest most planets, or as if he wanted to visit the
”geography of those well known lands whose basements are
still left unexploited.”
Another element interests him: Theme, the original idea,
out of which everything flows naturally without divulging
where it will take the composer, and that the contrapuntal
and harmonic lines adopt and nourish.
“After having found a musical idea, I have only to withdraw
myself, I let the emotional and artistic material exhaust
the substance of my idea, and I am under the illusion that
my solution is the one that anybody would have
chosen. For me, the important thing is to go further,
not to invent new formulas.”
Delplace likes to cite Cioran, whose phrases ‘tender
geometry’ or ‘exercise on a metaphysical background’ as
applied to Bach, suit him as well, and particularly apply
to his Trente Preludes & Fugues.
His determination to write tonal music naturally kept him
far from the official contemporary music circles.
It was only in 2000 that he joined the Phoenix group
founded by Jean-François Zygel and Thierry Escaich.
The Académie des Beaux-Arts awarded him the Prix Florent
Schmitt in 2001.