Impressionist · Intermediate
Embryons desséchés
by Erik Satie
- Catalog
- Key
- C major
- Year
- 1913
- Form
- Character Piece
- Instrumentation
- Solo Piano
- Difficulty
- Intermediate
- License
- Public Domain
- Source
- IMSLP / Petrucci Music Library
Embryons desséchés by Erik Satie, catalogued as an early manuscript, is a work for solo piano in C major. Composed during the Impressionist era, it forms part of the composer's enduring contribution to the keyboard repertoire and is freely available in the public domain through archives such as IMSLP.
Erik Satie's slim, ironic piano miniatures — the three Gymnopédies, the Gnossiennes, the Pièces froides — invented an alternative French keyboard tradition: spare, modal, anti-rhetorical, and deeply influential on Debussy and the entire twentieth century.
The work is suited to intermediate-level pianists. As with all repertoire from this period, study editions vary; the public-domain engravings linked here are based on the most widely-circulated nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century editions and are sufficient for serious study, recital preparation, and recording.
About Erik Satie
Erik Satie's slim, ironic piano miniatures — the three Gymnopédies, the Gnossiennes, the Pièces froides — invented an alternative French keyboard tradition: spare, modal, anti-rhetorical, and deeply influential on Debussy and the entire twentieth century.
Key character — C major
Bright, plain, and rhetorical. The native key of the keyboard. Bach uses it for his First Prelude in the Well-Tempered Clavier; Beethoven for the heroic Waldstein Sonata.
The Impressionist Era
Debussy, Ravel, and their contemporaries reimagined the piano as a vehicle for color, perfume, and atmosphere. Modal scales, parallel chords, and pedal effects replace traditional development with shimmering, evocative tableaux.
About the Character Piece form
A short, self-contained Romantic miniature with a distinct mood or programmatic suggestion — the genre that includes Schumann's Albumblätter, Mendelssohn's Songs Without Words, and Grieg's Lyric Pieces.