Champagne Galop

The Champagne Galop (Danish: Champagnegaloppen) is a piece of orchestral music by the Danish composer Hans Christian Lumbye (1810–1874) which was written to celebrate the second anniversary of Copenhagen's Tivoli in 1845. Together with Lumbye's Telegraph Galop and Copenhagen Steam Railway Galop, it was included in the 2006 Danish Culture Canon as a masterpiece of Danish classical music.[1]

Champagne Galop
by Hans Christian Lumbye
Tivoli's first concert hall (anonymous drawing from 1856)
EnglishChampagne Galop
Native nameChampagnegaloppen
GenreOrchestral music
Performed22 August 1845 (1845-08-22): Tivoli, Copenhagen

Background

The Champagne Galop was composed for the second anniversary of Copenhagen's Tivoli Gardens on 15 August 1845. As a result of torrential rain, Lumbye — who was also Tivoli's resident conductor — was only able to present it the following week on 22 August.[2]

Lumbye's grandson, the conductor Tippe Lumbye (1879–1959), had a story to tell about the piece's origin: "One evening, Lumbye was invited to a formal celebration at the British Embassy in Copenhagen but, passing his regular haunt on the way, he decided to spend the evening there in more familiar company. As he arrived back at the family home late in the evening, he was forced to explain how the embassy, which he had in fact never visited, had been wallowing in champagne and festivity. To illustrate it all for his curious family, he sat down at the piano and improvised a piece that would later be known as the world-famous Champagne Galop."[2]

Description

In his memoirs Mit Theaterliv, Lumbye's friend, the ballet-master August Bournonville comments on the piece. "While I by no means would ascribe the whole of Lumbye's success to the Champagne Galop, let me dwell for a moment on the impatient ferment brewing up in the first part, the cork popping off and the glasses being filled in the second part, a toast to good health, the frothy nectar downed in the third part and then a light-headed joy through the entire fourth part until a welcome "Da Capo" brings a new bottle to the table and all is swept up in a tumultuous bacchanale."[2]

The piece is a good example of the entertaining music Lumbye liked to compose. Known as the Strauss of the North, he was a master at integrating popular dance rhythms into the compositions he wrote for those who came to his Tivoli concerts with. With its fast beat and melodious inventions, the Champagne Galop is known throughout Denmark but it is still surprising that Lumbye was so quick to include the xylophone in his symphony orchestra. It took quite a few years before the instrument became a part of orchestras elsewhere.[1][3]

Popularity

In recent years, the piece has gained increasing popularity on the international scene and was, for example, included in the Vienna Philharmonic's New Year's Concert in 2010[4] and 2015. With an average duration of 2 minutes, 23 seconds, it has been included in over 20 albums since 1993.[5] The piece has also gained a lot of attention from the young people of Denmark, recently because of the Monte Carlo (radio programme), who uses the piece as a celebration fanfare when someone have won in their quiz.

Film

The film Champagnegaloppen (1938), a musical, is based on Lumbye's music.[6]

References

  1. "Telegraph-Galop, 1844, Champagne-Galop, 1845, Kjöbenhavns Jernbane-Damp-Galop, 1847, H.C. Lumbye (1810–1874)" Archived 2013-10-29 at the Wayback Machine, in Kulturkontacten 20, 2006. (in Danish) Retrieved 13 February 2013.
  2. "Champagne Galop (1845)" Archived February 2, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, Det Kongelige Bibliotek. (in Danish) Retrieved 13 February 2013.
  3. "H.C. Lumbye", Dacapo records. Retrieved 14 February 2013.
  4. "New Year's Concert 2010 / Pretre, Vienna Philharmonic", ArkivMusic. Retrieved 14 February 2013.
  5. "Hans Christian Lumbye, Champagne Galop for orchestra (or piano)", AllMusic. Retrieved 14 February 2013.
  6. "Champagnegaloppen", IMDb. Retrieved 13 February 2013.
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