Information about The Sorcerer's Apprentice



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Illustration from around 1882 by S. Barth
The Sorcerer's Apprentice is the English name of both an 1897 symphonic poem by Paul Dukas (L'apprenti sorcier in French), and of a 1797 ballad by Goethe (Der Zauberlehrling in German), which inspired this musical work. Goethe, in turn, based his poem on Philopseudes, a story by Lucian of Samosata.

The Sorcerer's Apprentice is also the title of three novels, one by François Augiéras, one by Elspeth Huxley, and another by Hanns Heinz Ewers. It is also the title of a Doctor Who novel by Christopher Bulis. The name is also given to a CBBC show by which a professional magician chooses his apprentice.

General plot

The tale begins as an old sorcerer departs his workshop, leaving his apprentice with chores to perform. The apprentice tires of fetching water for a bath or tank, and enchants a broomstick to do the work for him, using magic he is not yet fully trained in. However, soon the floor is awash with water, and he realises that he cannot stop the broom because he does not know the magic word to make it stop. Despairing, he splits the broom in two with an axe, but each of the pieces takes up a pail and continues fetching water, now faster than ever. When all seems lost in a massive flood, the old sorcerer returns, quickly breaks the spell and saves the day.

In some versions, the sorcerer expels the apprentice for causing the mess. In other versions the sorcerer, who is sometimes a bit amused at the apprentice having received a forceful object lesson for the need for proper control of magic he will never forget, reprimands him more mildly.

L'apprenti sorcier

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Preview for Walt Disney's Fantasia (1940''
Although Dukas's musical piece was already quite well known and popular, it was made particularly famous by its inclusion in the 1940 Walt Disney animated film Fantasia, in which Mickey Mouse plays the role of the apprentice. Its popularity caused it to be used again in Fantasia 2000.

L'apprenti sorcier is subtitled "Scherzo after a ballad by Goethe", perhaps indicating that it was intended as a scherzo of Dukas's untitled symphony, with which it has some thematic similarity. On the other hand, L'apprenti sorcier is clearly program music while the symphony is abstract. The sorcerer's apprentice's music uses the whole tone scale.

There have been numerous recordings of the music. The full effects of the lush orchestral work were first captured effectively with the advent of electrical recordings, including the 1929 performance by the New York Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Arturo Toscanini, released by RCA Victor. Toscanini also made one of the first high fidelity recordings of the music, again for RCA, with the NBC Symphony Orchestra in 1950. The first stereophonic recording was probably by Charles Munch and the Boston Symphony Orchestra, also for RCA.

In Who Framed Roger Rabbit,a cameo appearance by the brooms from Fantasia is accompanied by an excerpt of Dukas' musical piece.

Der Zauberlehrling

Goethe's poem is a ballad in fourteen stanzas. The story proceeds as described above up to where the floor begins to flood. Not knowing how to control the enchanted broomstick, the apprentice splits it in two with an axe, only for each of the pieces to take up a pail and continue fetching water, now at twice the speed. When all seems lost, the old sorcerer returns, quickly breaks the spell and saves the day. The poem finishes with the old sorcerer's statement that powerful spirits should only be called by the master himself. Interestingly, the question of the sorcerer's anger with his apprentice, which appears in both Philopseudes and Fantasia, does not appear in Der Zauberlehrling.

Der Zauberlehrling is extremely well-known in the German-speaking world. The lines in which the apprentice implores the returning sorcerer to help him with the mess he has created have turned into a cliché, especially the line Die Geister, die ich rief ("The spirits that I called"), a garbled version of one of Goethe's lines, which is often used to describe a situation where somebody summons help or uses allies that he cannot control, especially in politics.

Philopseudes

Philopseudes (Greek for "Lovers of lies") is a short frame story by Lucian, written c. AD 150. The narrator, Tychiades, is visiting the house of a sick and elderly friend, Eucrates, where he has an argument about the reality of the supernatural. Several internal narrators then tell him various tales, intended to convince him that supernatural phenomena are real. Each story in turn is either rebutted or ridiculed by Tychiades. Eventually Eucrates recounts a tale extremely similar to Goethe's Zauberlehrling, which had supposedly happened to him in his youth. While the similarities are so great as to make it obvious that Lucian was Goethe's inspiration, there are several small differences:
  • The sorcerer is instead an Egyptian mystic, a priest of Isis called Pancrates;
  • Eucrates is not an apprentice, but a companion who eavesdrops on Pancrates casting his spell; and
  • Although a broom is listed as one of the items that can be animated by the spell, Eucrates actually uses a pestle. (Pancrates also sometimes used the bar of a door.)
However perhaps the most important difference is the moral of the story. In Der Zauberlehrling and in Fantasia, it is generally presumed that the story embodies some maxim or moral, and that it is something along the lines of "don't start what you can't finish" or "don't meddle with things you don't understand". In Philopseudes, however, the intention is to ridicule tall tales.

Movie adaptation

On February 12, 2007, Disney announced that actor Nicolas Cage would play the role of the sorcerer Yen Sid in a live-action version of The Sorcerer's Apprentice. [1]

Trivia

  • A similar sounding theme can heard throughout the arcade game Zoo Keeper.
  • The Disney Company coined the name Yen Sid for the Sorcerer in 1940. Reversing the name spells D-I-S-N-E-Y.
  • The Disney Company was originally going to star Dopey from the Disney feature film Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, but Walt Disney wanted Mickey to be the star.
  • The music is written in 9/8 time at the beginning and end, but in 3/8 time for the majority, which includes the main theme.
  • The Sorcerer's Apprentice, as used in Fantasia, has a place in the continuity in the Kingdom Hearts series, due to the appearance of Yen Sid and based on a book found in the Tower that reads: "All the king's past mischief is recorded here."

References

See also

Similar themes (such as the power of magic or technology turning against the insufficiently wise person invoking it) are found in many traditions and works of art.

External links

English}}} 
Writing system: Latin (English variant) 
Official status
Official language of: 53 countries
Regulated by: no official regulation
Language codes
ISO 639-1: en
ISO 639-2: eng
ISO 639-3: eng  
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A symphonic poem or tone poem is a piece of orchestral music in one movement in which some extra-musical program provides a narrative or illustrative element. This program may come from a poem, a story or novel, a painting or another source.
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Paul Abraham Dukas (October 1, 1865-May 17, 1935) was a Parisian-born French composer and teacher of classical music.

Biography

Dukas was from a French-Jewish family.
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French (français, pronounced [fʁɑ̃ˈsɛ]) is a Romance language originally spoken in France, Belgium, Luxembourg, and Switzerland, and today by about 300 million people around the world as either
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ballad is a narrative poem, usually set to music; thus, it often is a story told in a song. Any story form may be told as a ballad, such as historical accounts or fairy tales in verse form.
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Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

Born: July 28 1749(1749--)
Free City of Frankfurt
Died: March 22 1832 (aged 84)
Weimar, Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach
Occupation: Polymath
Nationality: German
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German language (Deutsch, ] ) is a West Germanic language and one of the world's major languages.
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Lucian of Samosata (Greek: Λουκιανὸς ὁ Σαμοσατεύς, Latin: Lucianus; c. A.D.
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Samosata, (Armenian: Շամշատ, Shamshat) was an ancient city on the right (west) bank of the Euphrates whose ruins existed at the modern city of Samsat, Adıyaman Province, Turkey until the site was flooded
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The Sorcerer's Apprentice

Author François Augiéras
Original title L'apprenti sorcier
Translator Sue Dyson
Country France
Language French
Genre(s) Novel
Publisher Julliard
Publication date 1964
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novel (from, Italian novella, Spanish novela, French nouvelle for "new", "news", or "short story of something new") is today a long prose narrative set out in writing.
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Hanns Heinz Ewers (November 3, 1871, Düsseldorf - June 12, 1943, Berlin) was a German actor, poet, philosopher, and writer of short stories and novels. While he wrote on a wide range of subjects, he is today known chiefly for his works of horror, particularly his trilogy of novels
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The Sorcerer's Apprentice is an original novel written by Christopher Bulis and based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It features the First Doctor, Susan, Ian and Barbara.
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Christopher Bulis is a writer best known for his work on various Doctor Who spin-offs. He is one of the most prolific authors to write for the various ranges of spin-offs from the BBC Television series Doctor Who
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Magic, sometimes known as sorcery, is a complete conceptual system of thought, belief, and knowledge that asserts human ability to control the natural world (events, objects, people, and physical phenomena ) through mystical, paranormal or supernatural means.
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Apprenticeship is a system of training a new generation of skilled crafts practitioners, which is still popular in some countries. Apprentices (or in early modern usage "prentices") build their careers from apprenticeships.
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A broom is a cleaning tool consisting of stiff fibres attached to, and roughly parallel to, a cylindrical handle, the broomstick. In the context of witchcraft, "broomstick" is likely to refer to the broom as a whole.
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Walter Elias Disney (December 5 1901 – December 15 1966) was an American film producer, director, screenwriter, voice actor, animator, entrepreneur, and philanthropist.
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Animation is the rapid display of a sequence of images of 2-D artwork or model positions in order to create an illusion of movement. It is an optical illusion of motion due to the phenomenon of persistence of vision, and can be created and demonstrated in a number of ways.
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Fantasia is a 1940 motion picture, produced by Walt Disney and first released on November 13, 1940 in the United States.
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Mickey Mouse

First appearance Plane Crazy (May 15, 1928)
Created by Walt Disney and Ub Iwerks
Voiced by Walt Disney (1929–1946)
Jim MacDonald (1946–1983)
Wayne Allwine (1983 to date)

Mickey Mouse
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All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile
Fantasia 2000 is an animated feature produced by Walt Disney Feature Animation and released by Walt Disney Pictures.
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A scherzo (plural scherzi) is a name given to a piece of music or a movement from a larger piece such as a symphony. The word means "joke" in Italian. Sometimes the word scherzando
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A symphony is an extended composition usually for orchestra and usually comprising four movements.

Characteristics

The main characteristics of the classical symphony, as it existed by the end of the 18th century in the German-speaking world were:

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In music, a theme is the initial or primary melody. The 1958 Encyclopédie Fasquelle defines a theme as follows:
  • "Any element, motif, or small musical piece that has given rise to some variation becomes thereby a theme.

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Program music is a form of art music intended to evoke extra-musical ideas, images in the mind of the listener by musically representing a scene, image or mood [1] .
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Absolute Music (sometimes abstract music) is a term used to describe music that is not explicitly "about" anything, non-representational or non-objective. In contrast with program music, absolute music has no words and no references to stories or images or any other kind of
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The New York Philharmonic is the oldest active symphony orchestra in the United States, organized during 1842. Based in New York City, the Philharmonic performs most of its concerts at Avery Fisher Hall and has long been considered one of the best orchestras in the world.
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Arturo Toscanini (IPA:/ɑrˈturɔ ˌtɔskɑˈnini/) (March 25, 1867 – January 16, 1957) was an Italian musician.
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RCA Records is one of the flagship labels of Sony BMG Music Entertainment. RCA Records was founded in 1901 as the Victor Talking Machine Company, and the RCA initials stand for Radio Corporation of America, which was the parent corporation in the pre-BMG days.
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