Culture | Can’t get you out of my head

“Boléro” is among the most lucrative works of classical music

It is also at the forefront of a new film and copyright dispute

The French composer Maurice Ravel at the piano.
Photograph: Alamy

MAURICE RAVEL’S “Boléro” is a strange piece of music, consisting of two melodies repeated nine times each. Originally the score to a ballet, it is catchy and keeps running in the listener’s head long after it ends. “Boléro”, a new French biopic about Ravel’s struggle to compose the work in 1928, also employs repetition. Anne Fontaine, the director and co-writer, returns to Ravel’s tortured sexuality, fascination with mechanical noise and slow mental deterioration. He died in 1937 of a brain disease; neurologists think it may have been frontotemporal dementia, which is associated with obsessive repetition.

This article appeared in the Culture section of the print edition under the headline “Can’t get you out of my head”

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