•
Don (1962 version) • 3
flutes (II and II doubling on
piccolo),
alto flute in G,
oboe (
English horn),
E-flat clarinet,
clarinet in A,
bass clarinet in B-flat,
bassoon • 4
horns in F,
trumpet in D, trumpet in C,
tenor trombone,
bass trombone,
contrabass trombone • 3
harps,
piano,
celesta,
mandolin,
guitar – guitar and mandolin are both amplified •
timpanist and 6
percussionists •
strings •
version nouvelle 1989 • 4 flutes (3 flutes and alto flute), oboe, clarinet,
E-flat clarinet, bass clarinet, bassoon • 4 horns in F, trumpet in D, trumpet in C, tenor trombone, bass trombone, contrabass trombone • mandolin, guitar (both amplified) • 7
percussionists playing:
Chinese cymbals,
snare drum,
glockenspiel,
chimes,
crotales, 2
vibraphones, 3
bongos, 2
xylophones, 2
bell plates, 3
pr claves, 2
pr maracas, 5
suspended cymbals, 6
Almglocken, 3
gongs, 2
tam-tams, 2
bass drums, timpani • 3 harps, piano, celesta • 4
violins, 4
violas, 5
cellos, 3
double basses • '''
Improvisation I "Le vierge, le vivace et le bel aujourd'hui"''' (1957 version) • soprano • harp • vibraphone • 4 percussionists: 2 blocks of metal, 2 tam-tams, large bass drum; 1 pair of high crotales, 2 small bass drums; 1 pair of deep crotales, 1 deep bass drum; 3 suspended cymbals, 3 gongs •
version nouvelle 1989 • 2 flutes (both doubling on piccolos), E-flat clarinet, clarinet in A), 2
alto saxophones in E-flat • 4 horns in F • 8
percussionists: chimes, xylophone,
tenor drum, bass drum, 2 vibraphones, 2
cowbells, 2 tam-tams, 6 bongos, 2
snare drums, tuned Almglocken (
g>c’’), 3 gongs, 2 suspended cymbals, 6
crotales (indefinite
pitch), optional glockenspiel • 3 harps, mandolin, guitar • 8 violas, 6 double basses • '''
Improvisation II "Une dentelle s'abolit"''' •
soprano, harp,
vibraphone,
tubular bells, piano, celesta, 4 percussionists: suspended cymbals, gong, vibraphone, chimes, crotales, 4
pr maracas, 3
pr claves, 2 tam-tams • '''
Improvisation III "À la nue accablante tu"''' • 3
flutes (2nd and 3rd doubling on piccolo), alto flute in G (doubling on piccolo) • tenor trombone • 7 percussionists: claves,
congas, glockenspiel, chimes,
Chinese cymbals, bass drum, 2 xylophones (4 hands), bell plate, 6 Almglocken, 5 bongos • 3 harps (special tuning required for the two of them), celesta, mandolin, guitar • 5 cellos, 3 double basses •
Tombeau • 2 flutes (1st doubling on piccolo), English horn, E-flat clarinet, clarinet in A, bass clarinet in B-flat, bassoon • horn, trumpet in D, trumpet in C, tenor trombone, bass trombone, contrabass trombone • 2 harps, piano, guitar, vibraphone, tubular bells, xylophone, bass drum (playing the vibraphone and
timbales), gongs (playing the
tom-tom and plate bells) • 4 violins, 4 violas, 2 cellos, 2 double basses The piece has a relatively simple large-scale
dynamic shape: the outer movements are written for large ensembles, the second and fourth movements for smaller groups, and the central third movement uses just ten instrumentalists and the soprano. The general dynamic is loudest at the work's opening and closing and most quiet in the middle. The first movement opens with a loud sound which immediately becomes quiet and the last closes with a rapid
crescendo. In fact the last movement "is consumed by a vast and monolithic crescendo that slowly and steadily gains in textural and contrapuntal complexity as its unfolds before breaking off after some fifteen minutes: it is the monolithic inexorability of its unfolding over so vast an expanse of time that makes the experience of
Tombeau so gripping". The symmetrical structure of the work is readily apparent not only in its dynamics, but in the use of fragments in the opening and closing sections and the disposition of instruments. The work opens and closes with the same chord. The composition also includes instances of
tone painting, as in the first movement where "fog and the hovering characteristic of fog are suggested by the long soft roll on the suspended cymbals that underlies much of the movement, the sudden motion of denser thickets of fog in a gust of wind by adding other rolls to the suspended cymbal roll". According to one critic, "[Boulez's] works inhabit their own special soundworld". In
Pli selon Pli he groups instruments in atypical ways. For example, "The customary string section is not used for lyrical, cantabile melodies, but rather for sounds such as tremolos 'snapped' pizzicati and other quasi-percussive effects." At times, "Three harps, mandolin and guitar are added to two pianos to form a plucked/struck string group." Bells are used so as to avoid any association with religious ceremony. Instead "their combination with other metal percussion creates for a unique sonority – quite peculiar to itself." He described the orchestration as "extraordinarily inventive, with sometimes a completely different timbre between one phrase – or even note – and the next."
John Rockwell recognized both the work's innovations and its sources: "as evident as the novelty of these pieces are their debts to other composers and other cultures–the Expressionist tensions of Schoenberg, the exuberant racket of Chinese percussion, above all the piercing aviary of Messiaen. Which is not to deny Mr. Boulez his eagerly sought-after originality, merely to place it in context." The published score of the original version was printed with some sections in black, green, blue, violet and red to illustrate, according to a
Pierpont Morgan Library exhibition catalog, "the different degrees of rigor with which its various parts are to be realized in performance". The colors did not appear in later versions. ==Performance history==