Poulenc: Les Chemins De L'amour, Fp. 106 May 2026
: The work was written specifically for the celebrated French singing actress Yvonne Printemps , whom Poulenc deeply admired. Her recording helped the song achieve significant early success.
: The piece is in strophic form , primarily divided into two segments.
: The vocal line is smooth and clean, moving largely in scalar motion with "lilting repeated leaps". While the harmonies feature Poulenc's characteristic subtle chromaticism, they are more conservative and "typically tuneful" compared to his more complex settings of surrealist poetry. Poulenc: Les chemins de l'amour, FP. 106
: The key shifts to D-flat major , representing an emotional journey from longing to a bittersweet kind of hope or despair.
Musically, the song is a "perfect pastiche" of the cabaret and musical theater styles Poulenc had loved since his youth. It is characterized by its lyrical beauty, clarity, and expressive nuance. : The work was written specifically for the
: While Poulenc provided roughly 20 minutes of music for the production, Les chemins de l'amour is the only portion that has survived; the rest of the score is lost.
Originally, the song was not intended as a standalone recital piece but as part of the incidental music for Jean Anouilh’s play Léocadia . The play tells the story of a young prince obsessed with the memory of a woman he knew for only three days; a young woman is eventually hired to impersonate her and bring him back to reality. : The vocal line is smooth and clean,
: These are set in C-sharp minor , evoking a sense of lost love and melancholy.