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Bolero's Industrious Nature

Ravel's Greatest Hit: The Ultimate Bolero
Ravel's Greatest Hit: The Ultimate Bolero

Bolero is perhaps most famous as the love theme for Dudley Moore and Bo Derek in the 1979 movie 10. But Maurice Ravel didn't strictly have romance in mind when he composed the classic piece a half-century earlier, music commentator Miles Hoffman says.

Bolero started out as a ballet score commissioned by dancer Ida Rubenstein. Her troupe danced the composition's first performance at the Paris Opera in 1928. It was an instant hit.

Ravel, whose roots were in the Basque country on the French-Spanish border, originally called the piece Fandango. As romantic as it may seem, Ravel said the pulsing, rhythmic composition was inspired by one of the factories he had visited with his father, who was an engineer.

"It's the orchestra that makes it work," Hoffman says. "It's the colors in the orchestra. He keeps adding instruments, he keeps changing the orchestration. But he doesn't change the tune, he doesn't change the harmony, he doesn't change the rhythm. Nothing changes except the orchestration -- and the volume."

"Over the years, the piece has been arranged by just about everybody," Hoffman tells NPR's Renee Montagne, as they sample a variety of versions of Bolero from a new compilation CD.

Music Heard in this Report

All selections are from Ravel's Greatest Hit: The Ultimate Bolero (BMG Classics)

1. (Orchestral Version) Boston Symphony Orchestra, Charles Munch, Conductor

2. (Piano Duet) Jacques Fray and Mario Braggiotti

3. (Brass Quintet) The Canadian Brass

4. (Orchestral Version) Same as #1.

5. Benny Goodman and His Orchestra

6. (Orchestral Version) Same as #1.

Copyright 2022 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

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Morning Edition music commentator Miles Hoffman is the author of The NPR Classical Music Companion, now in its tenth printing from the Houghton Mifflin Company. Before joining Morning Edition in 2002, Hoffman entertained and enlightened the nationwide audience of NPR's Performance Today every week for 13 years with his musical commentary, "Coming to Terms," a listener-friendly tour through the many foreign words and technical terms peculiar to the world of classical music.