Adolphe Adam was a popular writer of ballet and opera music in early 19th-century France. He wrote with great speed and completed
Giselle in about two months. The music was written in the smooth, song-like style of the day called
cantilena. This style is well known to music lovers from
Bellini's opera
Norma and
Donizetti's
Lucia di Lammermoor. Adam used several
leitmotifs in the ballet. This is a short musical phrase that is associated with a certain character, event, or idea. Adam's leitmotifs are heard several times throughout the ballet. There is a leitmotif associated with Giselle and another with Albrecht. Hilarion's motif marks his every entrance. It suggests the Fate theme in
Beethoven's
Fifth Symphony. Another leitmotif is associated with the "he loves me, he loves me not" flower test in act 1, which is heard again in the mad scene, and in act 2 when Giselle offers flowers to Albrecht. The Wilis have their own motif. It is heard in the overture, in act 1 when Berthe tells the story of the Wilis, and in the mad scene. It is heard again in act 2 when the Wilis make their first entrance. The hunting horn motif marks sudden surprises. This motif is heard when Albrecht is exposed as a nobleman. The music was completely original. A critic noted, however, that Adam had borrowed eight bars from a romance by a Miss Puget and three bars from the huntsman's chorus in
Carl Maria von Weber's opera
Euryanthe. One dance historian wrote:
Additions to the score Adam's score for
Giselle acquired several additional numbers over the course of its history, with some of these pieces becoming an integral part of the ballet's performance tradition. Immediately following the first
répétition générale of
Giselle on the stage of the Paris Opéra, the danseuse
Nathalie Fitz-James used her influence as the mistress of an influential patron of the theatre to have a
pas inserted for herself into the ballet. Coralli quickly arranged the
"Pas de deux des jeunes paysans" (
"Pas de deux of young peasants") for Fitz-James and the danseur
Auguste Mabille, with music arranged from pieces by the composer
Friedrich Burgmüller including his
Souvenirs de Ratisbonne for the
coda. This
pas was only retained for Grisi's performances and never performed again after her departure from Saint Petersburg. Marius Petipa commissioned an additional
pas de deux from the composer
Ludwig Minkus for the choreographer's 1884 revival of
Giselle for the ballerina
Maria Gorshenkova. Minkus based the music for this
pas on airs taken from Adolphe Adam's score for the ballet
Orfa. Three solo variations were added to the ballet by Petipa during the latter half of the 19th century. The first was arranged in 1867 for the
Grand pas de deux of the second tableau for the ballerina
Adèle Grantzow. The music was never used again after Bessone's departure from Russia until
Agrippina Vaganova added it to the
Peasant pas de deux for the Kirov Ballet's production of
Giselle in 1932. The inclusion of this variation in the
Peasant pas de deux remains part of the Mariinsky Theatre's performance tradition of
Giselle to the present day. The third variation added by Petipa was also composed by Drigo and has survived as one of the most beloved passages of
Giselle. This variation, sometimes dubbed as the
Pas seul, was arranged 1887 for the ballerina
Elena Cornalba's performance in a revival of Saint-Léon's
Fiametta. Cornalba then included it for her début in
Giselle in December of that year, where it has remained ever since. The variation was also danced by many of Cornalba's successors in the role of Giselle at the Mariinsky Theatre. Cornalba's variation was first performed outside of Russia by
Olga Spessivtzeva in 1924 at the Paris Opéra, and from then on all productions staged outside of Russia included the variation. There was much confusion at that time as to who was responsible for composing the music, leading many ballet historians and musicologists to credit Ludwig Minkus as the author, a misconception which still persists. == Choreography ==