Claude Debussy · Estampes

Pagodes

2 min readLast updated November 2026
Table of contents

Dynamics

  • p – pp
  • Frequent but subtle decrescendos and diminuendos.
  • Occasional ff passages for contrast.
  • Bar 91 – encore plus pp.
  • Bar 97 – aussi pianissimo plus possible.

Rhythm / Tempo / Metre

  • Moderately animated
  • Frequent tempo fluctuations – use of ritenuto, rubato, and returns to a tempo.
  • Primarily 4/4 metre, with a brief two-bar change to 2/4.
  • Triplets, quintuplets, and cross-rhythms - create a flowing, gamelan-like texture.
  • Continuous demisemiquavers in passages - enhance fluidity and motion.
  • Syncopation and ties - blurs barlines
  • Bar 15: rhythmic ostinato in triplet patterns.
  • Off-beat chords - reinforce rhythmic instability.
  • Coda: rapid demisemiquavers in upper register with sustained pedal, imitating gamelan resonance.

Texture

  • Frequently varied texture.(within the first 15 bars.)
    • Stratified (layered) polyphony.
    • Homophonic / Chordal( B section) : texture becomes more conventional, with melody and chordal accompaniment.
    • Melody-dominated homophony.
      • Melody moves around the texture.
  • Pedal notes - used for atmosphere.
  • Ostinato patterns throughout.
  • Wide range of piano explored.
  • Parts swapped between hands.
  • Bar 13: triplets begin at the top of the texture and move between layers

Structure

  • Overall loose ternary form (A–B–A).
  • Central section includes ideas from the opening; each main section contains subsections.

1–32 (A Section):

  • Main section introducing the first phrase.
  • Features slendro scale, gong-like sonorities, ambiguous tonality, pentatonic material, sustained pedal, and extended harmony.

33–52 (B Section):

  • Use of two-note chords.
  • Whole-tone melody passed from right hand to left.

53–77 (Return of A Section):

  • Opening theme returns in variation.
  • Central material reused to reach a climax.

78–end (Coda):

  • Rippling demisemiquavers and tuplet figures in high register.
  • Melody in left hand.
  • Gradual dynamic fade-out.

Melody

  • Based on the pentatonic scale - influenced by slendro tuning
  • Countermelody – conjunct, scalar; repeated in bar 9 - more Western-sounding
  • Two melodies – LH pentatonic, RH derived from first theme.(Bar 11)
  • chordal melody in block chords.(Bar 15)
  • Section B: employs whole-tone scale - Evokes the resonance of the gong ageng in gamelan.


Instrumentation (Sonority)

  • Written for solo piano - imitates the sonorities of the gamelan.
  • Extensive pedal use - to blur harmonies and sustain resonance.
  • High tessitura passages - imitate metallophones.
  • Staccato articulation - mimics the percussive effect of mallets.
  • Emphasis on resonance and colour rather than volume.


Tonality

  • Not in a fixed key; instead, has a tonal centre of B.
  • Bar 11: shifts briefly to G♯ minor.
  • Bar 23: returns to tonal centre of B.
  • Tonality often ambiguous due to modal and pentatonic writing.
  • Frequent chromatic inflection without functional resolution.
  • Produces a floating, non-directional harmonic effect.

Harmony

  • Non-functional harmony
  • Tonic and dominant pedal notes.
  • Gong-like open fifths - reinforce gamelan sonority.
  • Dissonant chords with added notes (6ths and 7ths).
  • Pentatonic harmony.
  • Changing background – same melody supported by different chords.
  • Static harmony avoids tonal progression.
  • Interval of major 2nd begins as a colouristic device, later functions within the chord.
  • Superimposed 4ths and 5ths.
  • Parallel chords.