Overtures by Hector Berlioz
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The French composer Hector Berlioz wrote a number of overtures, many of which have become popular concert items. They include overtures intended to introduce operas as well as independent concert overtures.
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[edit] Les francs-juges
Les francs-juges Opus 3. Composed 1826. The overture to Berlioz's first, unperformed opera.
[edit] Waverley
Waverley: grande ouverture (English: Waverley: Grand Overture) Opus 1. A concert overture composed in 1826-28. It was first performed at the Paris Conservatoire on 26 May 1828. Berlioz took his inspiration from Sir Walter Scott's Waverley novels.
[edit] Le roi Lear
Le roi Lear (English: King Lear), Opus 4. Composed in Nice in 1831 during Berlioz's journey back to France after his stay in Italy (as a result of winning the Prix de Rome). The overture is based on Shakespeare's King Lear, a recent discovery for the composer whose love of the dramatist is evident in many other of his works. It was first performed at the Paris Conservatoire on 22 December 1833.
[edit] Rob Roy
Intrata di Rob Roy Macgregor (English: Rob Roy Overture). Composed in 1831 and first performed at the Paris Conservatoire on 14 April 1833. The overture was inspired by Sir Walter Scott's novel Rob Roy. Berlioz was never happy with the piece, regarding it as "long and diffuse", and withdrew it after the premiere.
[edit] Benvenuto Cellini
Overture to the opera of the same name, composed in 1838.
[edit] Le carnaval romain
Le carnaval romain, ouverture pour orchestre (English: Roman Carnival Overture) Opus 9. Composed in 1843 and first performed at the Salle Herz, Paris on 3 February 1844. A stand-alone overture intended for concert performance, made up of material and themes from Berlioz's opera Benvenuto Cellini, including some music from the opera's carnival scene - hence the overture's title. It is scored for large orchestra, is in the key of A major, and features a prominent and famous solo for the cor anglais.
Roman Carnival Overture, Op. 9
[edit] Le corsaire
Le corsaire (English: The Corsair). Composed while Berlioz was on holiday in Nice in August 1844. It was first performed under the title La tour de Nice (The Tower of Nice) on 19 January 1845. It was then renamed Le corsaire rouge (after James Fenimore Cooper's novel The Red Rover) and finally Le corsaire (suggesting Byron's poem The Corsair).
[edit] La fuite en Egypte
Overture to La fuite en Egypte (English: The Flight into Egypt). With two other pieces, L'adieu des bergers and Le repos de la sainte famille, this made up La fuite en Egypte, a short work depicting Jesus and his family fleeing to Egypt to escape the persecution of King Herod, which was first published in 1852. This became the core of the oratorio L'enfance du Christ.
[edit] Béatrice et Bénédict
Béatrice et Bénédict. Overture to the opera of the same name, composed in 1862.
[edit] Les Troyens à Carthage: Prologue
Les Troyens à Carthage: Prologue (English: The Trojans at Carthage: Prologue) Berlioz's epic opera Les Troyens was never performed complete during his lifetime. In an attempt to have the opera staged by the Théâtre Lyrique in 1863, he split it into two parts, with Acts 1 and 2 becoming La prise de Troie (The Capture of Troy) and Acts 3-5 Les Troyens à Carthage. Only the latter was accepted and Berlioz wrote an orchestral prologue to introduce this version evoking the tragic fate of Troy.
[edit] Recordings
The individual overtures have been recorded many times. This is a list of collections exclusively devoted to Berlioz's overtures:
- Overtures: Les francs-juges, Waverley, Le roi Lear, Le carnaval romain, Béatrice et Bénédict, Le corsaire, Benvenuto Cellini. Staatskapelle Dresden, conducted by Sir Colin Davis. CD, RCA, 1998
- Overtures: La damnation de Faust, Op.24 (excerpts): Part I Scene 3: Hungarian March/Rakoczy March & Part II Scene 7: Ballet des syphes; Roman Carnival Overture, Op.9; Romeo et Juliette, Op.17 - Love Scene; Le roi Lear; Benvenuto Cellini, Op.23 - Overture; Le corsaire, Overture, Op.21. Polish State Philharmonic Orchestra, Katowice, Kenneth Jean cond. CD, DDD, TT: 1h08m, Naxos. Cat. no. No: 8.550231, barcode 0730099523127
- Overtures: Benvenuto Cellini, Op.23; Waverley, Op.1; Beatrice and Benedict; King Lear, Op.4; Roman Carnival Overture, Op.9; Rob Roy; Le Corsaire, Op.21. San Diego Symphony, Yoav Talmi. CD, DDD, TT: 1h15m, Naxos. Cat. no. 8.550999, barcode 0730099599924
[edit] Sources
- Booklet notes to the Davis recording
- David Cairns: Berlioz: The Making of an Artist (the first volume of his biography of the composer) (André Deutsch, 1989)
- Hugh Macdonald: Berlioz ("The Master Musicians", J.M.Dent, 1982)
- Berlioz: Memoirs (Dover, 1960)
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