Bacchus and Ariadne (ballet)
Bacchus and Ariadne (French: Bacchus et Ariane), Op. 43 is a ballet score by the French composer Albert Roussel written in 1930.
Ballet
Its composition roughly coincides with that of Roussel's Symphony No. 3. It describes the abduction of Ariadne by Dionysus. The Paris Opera premiered the two-act work under the direction of Philippe Gaubert on 22 May 1931, with choreography by Serge Lifar and sets by Giorgio de Chirico.
Orchestral Suites
Roussel created two orchestral suites from the score, the first premiered by Charles Münch on 2 April 1933, and the second by Pierre Monteux a year later.
Style
A late work, the piece reflects Roussel's distinctive orchestration style and his preference for late classical rhythms and harmonies.
gollark: Don't think so, sorry.
gollark: If it's two dimensional you'd just need 3, though the maths would still be a bit hard.
gollark: Which is a shame, since this sounds cool. I think if you had the volumes and some way to convert them into distances, and several computers/hypothetical listener things of known position, you could probably trilaterate the lighting's source pretty easily.
gollark: I do not believe there is a way for computers to detect sounds.
gollark: You probably *can't* run it in practical-CC, given limited RAM.
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