Posted on 05/03/2009 11:04:37 AM PDT by HoosierHawk
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Classical Music presented on the first Sunday of every month.
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Ping to First Sunday Music with Hector Berlioz. Enjoy!
Thank you.
I love his Requiem - must be performed in a cathedral! The brass ensembles calling to each other during the the “Tuba mirum” section of the “Dies irae” sends chills up my spine.
As the article mentions, Berlioz fell in love with a Shakespearean actress. Shakespeare's plays took Paris by storm in the 1830s. His future wife was one of the great stars of the stage. Learning English was the fashion so that people could read Shakespeare.
One is the Lacrymosa from the Requiem. It's in 9/8, but it's not in the traditional 3 groups of 3. It's 9 straight beats with the strong beat on 6. Near the end, there is a titanic struggle over E (brass) versus F (chorus) as a heaven-versus-hell battle. Then for the crowning touch, Berlioz staggers the chorus and orchestra a half beat off each other down the A major scale to take advantage of the echo in the hall (or church). It's one of the most amazing moments in music.
The Dies Irae from the Requiem is another amazing piece. He has a separate section of timpani on stage along with 4 brass bands in the balconies. Choristers have told me that the din is so trmendous that they are totally dependent on the conductor to stay together. Before the brass bands come in, the sopranos work the theme (A minor), then the tenors take up the march (B-flat minor), and the chorus works it up as a canon (D minor). It abruptly switches to E-flat major ("Tuba mirum spargens") as the brass bands echo off each other in fanfares, climaxed by the chorus singing over the drums. There is a short transition in A-flat minor ("Mors stupebit") before we go through the brass band section again, but with the basses taking up a chant along with the brass. The piece ends quietly, as though the chorus and orchestra are too shocked by what they have just performed.
The Sanctus from the Requiem features a tenor suspended from a catwalk and the only complete fugue in the piece.
His song cycle, "Les Nuits d'ete" shows a saner side of the composer. Elly Ameling's performance is prety much definitive.
I haven't listened to much Berlioz as he never caught my ear. However, I didn't like Richard Strauss at all until I gave some serious listening and study to his work.....and now I look forward to hearing just about all of his compositions.
I'll pursue the Berlioz links above tonight.....and see if he gets a 10 or a 5 with me.
He sure had a stormy adult life, that's for sure!
Leni
And the Damnation of Faust is, plain and simply, weird. Besides, the men get the two really good choruses to sing.
Berlioz! Thx.
During the performances, the musicians tell tales, read stories, and exchange gossip to relieve the tedium of the bad music they are paid to perform.
In a certain opera house of northern Europe, it is the custom among the members of the orchestra, several of whom are cultivated men, to spend their time reading books -- or even discussing matters literary and musical -- whenever they perform any second-rate operas. This is to say that they read and talk a good deal. Next to the score on every music-stand, some book or other is generally to be found, and a performer apparently most absorbed in scanning his part, or most earnestly counting his rests while watching for his cue, may actually be giving all his attention to Balzac's marvelous scenes, to Dickens's enchanting pictures of social life, or even to the study of one of the sciences.One man, however, never strayed from his post:
One man only in this orchestra does not allow himself any such diversion. Wholly intent upon his task, all energy, indefatigable, his eye glued to his notes and his arm in perpetual motion, he would feel dishonored if he were to miss an eighth note or incur censure for his tone quality. By the end of each act he is flushed, perspiring, exhausted; he can hardly breathe, yet he does not dare take advantage of the respite offered by the cessation of musical hostilities to go for a glass of beer at the nearest bar. The fear of missing the first measures of the next act keeps him rooted at his post. Touched by so much zeal, the manager of the opera house once sent him six bottles of wine, "by way of encouragement." But the artist, "conscious of his responsibilities," was so far from grateful for the gift that he returned it with the proud words: 'I have no need of encouragement.' The reader will have guessed that I am speaking of the man who plays the bass drum.Berlioz was quite the satirist; it's a very good work to read!
Thanks for the review. I will put this book on my list to read. Berlioz was also a journalist. He was a music critic for various French publications. This was how he supported himself while he wrote music in his free time.
I'm slowly building an archive of "First Sunday Music" and will have it completed next month. For those interested, you can access it here.
Super! Added to Favorites. Thx.
Now in favorites..You are expanding my usual classical listening and knowledge..
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