Le roi se meurt
Music for Le roi se meurt, a theatre play directed by Nikolas Bedu, Cercle Dramatique Français. The play was part of celebrations for the 100-year anniversary of Eugene Ionesco’s birth and was on at the Steiner theatre, London in November 2009.
Programme extract:
La Musique
Avec « Le Roi se meurt », le CDF initiera par ailleurs son souhait de fédérer au sein de ses productions tous les Arts liés de près ou de loin aux spectacles vivants.
Ainsi, pour la première fois dans son histoire, le CDF illustrera musicalement certains passages de la pièce, grâce à des oeuvres originales et spécialement créées pour « Le Roi se meurt » par la jeune compositrice Nahmi Moon (minimum Design music).
« Le Roi se meurt » is my first composition for theatre play. Most of my work has been film music, but after reading the play, this was an opportunity I couldn't resist. When writing music for films, I brainstorm the feelings the music should give for each scene. I express this with emotions, ambience, colours, temperature, etc. Music for theatre felt much harder to create as there was no final image to brainstorm from. I attended a rehearsal but it was still difficult to sketch the music because there were many distractions and the direction wasn't yet finalised. Maybe it was a too early rehearsal, but the music is needed for the full rehearsals. The director also had a few requirements: the music should be regal, energetic, crazy and pompous. I became even more confused after that!
I went back to the book to immerse myself in Ionesco's descriptions. The « mise en scène » in « Le Roi se meurt » brought back old memories from an antique toy shop I once saw in Paris. I stopped in front of the shop window and was fascinated by the display of strange looking small toys. It was a surreal moment, especially, the figure of a colourful ceramic toy king looking very serious and rigid. When I re-read « Le Roi se meurt &», I wondered whether Ionesco observed the world from a distance and projected it to the stage in a similar way I observed the figures and displays through the glass of the Parisian toy shop. Surreal moments are happening everyday in our life, but you often don't realise them because you are too busy. You lack the opportunity to observe, and let these moments pass away. In « Le Roi se meurt », Ionesco exposes these surreal moments in everyday life and bring them to the stage.
The seriousness combined with ridicule and the attachment to life of the king in the book, and the serious looking toy king in the shop gave me the inspiration for the music. I wanted the music to sound serious, passionate and crazy. When you're passionate about an activity, it is extremely serious to you, but for an observer taking a step back it may appear ridiculous. I intend the music in this production to create layers of emotions: when you're transfixed into the world of the king, the music sounds regal, serious, overwhelming, even passionate, but when you observe the characters suddenly it sounds ridiculous, all at the same time. »
Note: to license any of these tracks or to commission some original score check the contact page to get in touch.