Symphonie Fantastique
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Symphonie Fantastique (Fantastic Symphony) Opus 14, is a symphony written by French composer Hector Berlioz in 1830. It is widely regarded as one of the most important and representative pieces of the early Romantic period, and is still very popular with symphonic audiences worldwide.
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[edit] Outline
The symphony is a piece of program music which tells the story of "an artist gifted with a lively imagination" who has "poisoned himself with opium" in the "depths of despair" because of "hopeless love." There are five movements, which was unconventional for a symphony at the time:
- Rêveries - Passions (Dreams - Passions)
- Un bal (A Ball)
- Scène aux champs (Scene at the Country)
- Marche au supplice (March to the Scaffold)
- Songe d'une nuit de sabbat (Dream of a Witches' Sabbath)
[edit] First movement: "Rêveries - Passions"
The movement is radical in its harmonic outline, building a vast arch back to the home key, which, while similar to the Sonata Form of classical composition, was taken as a departure by Parisian critics. It is here that the listener is introduced to the theme of the artist's beloved, or the idée fixe. Throughout the movement, there is a simplicity of presentation of the melody and themes, which Schumann compared to "Beethoven's epigrams", ideas which could be extended, had the composer chosen to. In part, it is because Berlioz rejected writing the very symmetrical melodies then in academic fashion, and instead looked for melodies which were, "so intense in every note, as to defy normal harmonization", as Schumann put it.
The theme itself was taken from Berlioz's scène lyrique "Herminie", composed in 1828.
[edit] Second movement: "Un bal"
The second movement takes a rather plain waltz theme, again, derived from the idée fixe at first, and then transforming it. It is filled with running ascending and descending figures . While one critic called it "vulgar"[citation needed], the intent was to portray a single lonely soul amidst gaiety, as Berlioz wrote while composing it.
[edit] Third movement: "Scène aux champs"
The third movement opens with the English horn and offstage oboe tossing back and forth a characteristic melody meant to evoke the horns in the mountains. The English horn represents the artist and the oboe his beloved. The melodies of these instruments represent the artist and his beloved calling back-and-forth. This intent, to evoke a spirit of the country side inhabited by, not mere rustics, but people who were one with their place is part of Romanticism and can be traced back to the ideas of such writers Goethe. The idée fixe comes back. The movement swells to a peak, as if the artist is pushing away the idea of his beloved, the dramatic sounds fall away. The sound of distant thunder comes, in an innovative passage for four timpani players on two sets of timpani: it ends without resolution.
[edit] Fourth movement: "Marche au supplice"
The fourth movement, which Berlioz claimed to have written in a single night (but which he actually took from an unfinished project, the opera Les Francs-juges), is filled with blaring horns and rushing passages, and scurrying figures which would later show up again in the last movement. The movement describes a dream, in which the artist is executed for killing the love of his life. It uses a grotesque version of the theme by Berlioz's extraordinary technique of orchestration, mixing string pizzicato, woodwind staccato, brass chords and a single loud stroke of percussion, forming a highly unusual series of tone colors. The scene ends with a single short fortissimo G-minor chord that represents the fatal blow: the dropping of the trap door, or perhaps the guillotine blade; the series of pizzicato notes following can be seen to represent the rolling of the severed head into the basket. Immediately prior to the musical depiction of the beheading, there is a brief, nostalgic recollection of the idée fixe in a solo clarinet, as though representing the last conscious thought of the executed man; after his death, the final nine bars of the movement contain a victorious series of tutti G major chords, seemingly intended to convey the cheering of the onlooking throng.
[edit] Fifth movement: "Songe d'une nuit de sabbat"
The last movement, often played as a tone poem by itself, has a brooding opening, the sound of spirits marching through the graveyard. There follows, in turn, a familiar E-flat clarinet solo presenting the idée fixe as a vulgar dance tune; the call of church bells; a burlesque of a famous plainchant, the Dies Irae; and a fugue meant to represent, as Berlioz privately admitted, a giant orgy. There are a host of effects (including eerie col legno playing in the strings), from the bubbling of the witches' cauldron to the blasts of wind. The climactic finale of the symphony combines the somber Dies Irae melody with the wild fugue of the Ronde du Sabbat (Sabbath Round).
[edit] Importance
Berlioz wrote in his essay "On Imitation in Music":
- The aim of the second kind of imitation, as we have said before, is to reproduce the intonations of the passions and the emotions, and even to trace a musical image, or metaphor, of objects that can only be seen.
He later adds:
- emotional (imitation) is designed to arouse in us by means of sound the notion of the several passions of the heart, and to awaken solely through the sense of hearing the impressions that human beings experience only through the other senses. Such is the goal of expression, depiction or musical metaphors.
As part of this he uses an example of cyclical structure in music, which was an idea drawn from Beethoven's use of similar rhythmic structures or shapes, and the idea of musical "cycles", such as a "song cycle". Berlioz did not know of Mendelssohn's Octet, which uses this device as well.
Berlioz called this repeating melody an idée fixe (fixed idea). Carl Maria von Weber had previously used similar recurring fragments to represent characters or objects in his operas, though the Symphonie Fantastique is a dramatic example that opens the way for many others in the symphonic genre. Later examples would be composed by Robert Schumann and César Franck. The idea of melodies representing specific characters would be part of Richard Wagner's elaborate system of leitmotifs.
Also important is Berlioz' aggressive use of instruments, which even his enemies admitted was genius, both in terms of the size and scope, but also in the specificity of instructions—when to use mallets of different heads for drums, when to place and remove mutes, all notated on the score. This too would become an aspect of the work which would receive careful study, all the way into the 20th Century.
Leonard Bernstein called this symphony the first musical expedition into psychedelia because of its hallucinatory and dream-like nature, and because history suggests Berlioz composed at least a portion of it under the influence of opium.
In 1831, Berlioz wrote a much less well known sequel to the work, Lelio, for narrator and orchestra.
[edit] Instrumentation
The symphony is scored for an orchestra consisting of 2 flutes with flute 2 doubling piccolo, 2 clarinets (including E-flat clarinet), 2 oboes, 4 bassoons, 4 French horns, 2 trumpets, 2 cornets, 3 trombones, 2 ophecleides, 2 pairs of timpani, snare drum, cymbals, C and G bells, bass drum, 2 harps, and strings.
[edit] Harriet Smithson
Berlioz fell in love with an Irish actress, Harriet Smithson, after attending a performance of Shakespeare's Hamlet with her in the role of Ophelia, on 11 September 1827. He sent her numerous love letters, all of which went unanswered. When she left Paris they had still not met. He then wrote the symphony as a way to express his unrequited love. It premiered in Paris on December 5, 1830; Harriet was not present. She eventually heard the work in 1832 and realized that she was the genesis. The two finally met and were married on October 3, 1833. While the marriage was happy for several years, they were divorced nine years later, partially due to the language barrier between them.[1]
[edit] Trivia
- The soundtrack of Stanley Kubrick's film The Shining features a synthesized interpretation of the Symphonie Fantastique version of the Dies Irae, as arranged by Wendy Carlos. It is easily recognizable as the music played during The Shining's opening credits.
- The band Stars references the third movement of this work in the song "Look Up" on their album Heart.
- This famous piece is also used in the Julia Roberts film, Sleeping with the Enemy, while the abusive husband makes love to the battered wife.
- "Songe d'une nuit de sabbat", the fifth movement of Hector Berlioz's Symphonie Fantastique is sampled in "The Second Coming" by Juelz Santana.
- Theatre and puppetry artist Basil Twist developed an hour long performance set to the Symphonie Fantastique which premiered at the HERE Arts Center in April 1998. It received an OBIE Award[1], a UNIMA Citation of Excellence[2], and a Drama Desk Award nomination for Unique Theatrical Experience[3]. It has been performed at theatres around the United States (including the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts) and festivals around the world. Twist's Symphonie Fantastique is an underwater performance combining puppetry with music, dance and abstract art.
- The progressive rock band "Sky" included an arrangement of the symphony's fourth movement, "March to the Scaffold", in their album "Sky 4 – Forthcoming" [4].
[edit] References
- ^ Hugh MacDonald, Grove
[edit] External links
- Symphonie Fantastique on The Hector Berlioz Website, with links to Scorch full score and program note written by the composer
- Synthesized recording
- MP3 Creative Commons Recording