The Mystery of “Boléro”: is the composer Ravel really the sole author of the work?

The Mystery of “Boléro”: is the composer Ravel really the sole author of the work?
The Mystery of “Boléro”: is the composer Ravel really the sole author of the work?

The “Bolero” by French composer Maurice Ravel (1875-1937) is the work of one or more co-authors? This is the question that a French court will have to decide on Friday, as part of the copyright case related to one of the most widely broadcast pieces of classical music in the world.

The stakes are high: if the Society of Authors, Composers and Music Publishers (Sacem), the organization which manages and collects copyright in France, recognizes the Russian painter and decorator Alexandre Benois as co-author, THE “Bolero”which fell into the public domain in 2016, would be protected until May 1, 2039, Benois having died in 1960.

In France, copyright on a musical composition lasts for the entire life of its author and then for the following 70 years, after which it falls into the public domain and can be used freely.

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Historical Details

The “Bolero” was protected for 78 years and four months, as the law provides for extensions to compensate for the loss of earnings of French artists during the two world wars, which extended the protection until May 1, 2016.

During the hearing on February 14, the artist’s beneficiaries argued that refusing to recognize their ancestor as co-author of this global success is not a right that Sacem can claim.

“The music of the Bolero was created especially for the ballet”asserted Me Edouard Mille, lawyer for the Benois estate.

On the Ravel succession side, it is also estimated that the “Bolero” is a “collaborative work” with the Russian decorator, historical arguments in support.

Among these arguments are notably the presence of the name of Benois on the argument of two ballets performed on the evening of the premiere of Ravel’s work in 1928, the statements of Louis Laloy, general secretary of the Paris Opera, who wrote in Le Figaro that Alexandre Benois was the“auteur” of the three shows, or even a letter from a legal director of Sacem in the 1980s mentioning the collaboration with the ballet choreographer, Bronislava Nijinska…

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For Sacem’s lawyer, Me Josée-Andrée Bénazéraf, the plaintiffs’ claims fall under the “historical fiction”.

Financial implications

Recognizing co-authorship would imply “to have to tear up the 1929 declaration bulletin signed by Ravel who identifies himself as the sole author of the Boléro to replace it, (what) violates moral rights (from the composer) who always considered himself the sole author”she had pleaded at the hearing.

If the rights generated represented “for a time millions and millions of euros” annual, according to information provided to AFP by Sacem’s lawyer, Me Josée-Anne Bénazéraf, the amounts reached on average 135,507 euros per year between 2011 and 2016.

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