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SATIE'S COMPOSITIONS The music Although many other music by Erik Satie can be experienced (and is sometimes indicated as) furniture music, Satie applied the name only to five short pieces, composed in three separate sets:
The first set was apparently never performed (nor the score published) during Satie's lifetime. The second set contained reminiscences of popular tunes by, amongst others, Camille Saint-Saëns and Ambroise Thomas . It was premiered in Paris the year it was composed, as Intermission music to a lost Comedy by Max Jacob . During these intermissions the audience was invited to visit an exposition of children's drawings in the gallery hosting the premiere. Indications of the intentions of the artists giving the first performance are found in the manuscript of the score:
See also Entr'acte article for more details regarding the circumstances of this first, and only documented, public performance of furniture music during Satie's lifetime, assisted by the composer himself. The separate commissioned piece was sent to America. There are no known public performances or publications of this music prior to leaving the European continent. This piece is sometimes presented as ''furniture music No. 3''. As Satie's pieces of ''furniture music'' were, unlike ''Muzak'', very short pieces, with an indefinite number of repeats, this kind of furniture music later became associated with Repetitive Music (sometimes used as a synonym of Minimal Music ), but this kind of terminology did not yet exist in Satie's time. Publication For a quarter of a century after the composer's death, all of the ''furniture music'' pieces remained hidden for the general public, apart from being mentioned in early Satie biographies. By the end of the 1960s parts of the furniture music started to appear as Facsimile illustrations to press articles and new Satie biographies. The first full publication of sets 1 and 3 followed in the early 1970s . There was no full publication of the 2nd set before the last years of the 20th century. Media
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