Ibert's brief but brilliant Entr'acte is one of his most well-recognized works and a direct product of his love for Spanish literature and music. In 1935 Ibert wrote incidental music for a French production of Pedro Calderon's El médico de su honra. The entr'acte of that music was published that same year for flute or violin and guitar or harp. It has been transcribed for and recorded with many other instruments since its original publication. It opens with a breathless, whirling dance with propulsive accompaniment, inspired by flamenco guitar music. The opening is then repeated after the briefest of pauses, the music vividly calling to mind a dancer as he or she improvises a variation on the theme. That image of an animated dancer, showing off his or her footwork, continues in the following serenade-like solo for the guitar. That, in turn, leads into a cadenza for both instruments and a final, brief statement of the theme, ending, so obviously, with the dancer's arms in the air and a final stamp of the feet.
Jacques Ibert (1890-1962) studied at the Paris Conservatoire before embarking upon a successful composing career. The composer wrote for a variety of instruments and his works remain popular to this day, Entr’acte for Flute or Violin and Guitar being no exception. Composed in 1935, Entr’acte is suitable to intermediate level flautists, violinists and guitarists. Ibert was a unique composer who did not associate himself with any particular style. His music is generally lighthearted, often reflecting the composer’s wit and humour. Containing a variety of musical aspects and techniques, and, significantly, composed for an unusual arrangement of Flute or Violin with Guitaraccompaniment, Ibert ‘s Entr’acte is an exciting addition to the intermediate level Flute, Violin and Guitar repertoire