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Hector Berlioz
(1803-1869)
Son of a country doctor in south France
• Went to Paris for medical school, but ended up
at Paris Conservatory instead
Unprecedented, ambitious “grandiose”
program symphonies
• Extraordinary imagination for orchestral color
• Inspired by literature – Shakespeare & Virgil
Supported himself as a writer on music
• Wrote music criticism, orchestration treatise
Toured as a conductor of his own music
The Program Symphony:
Hector Berlioz
A more radical approach to program music
than the concert overture
An entire symphony with a program
• Several movements – each one tells part of the
“story”
• “Story” often published in the program
The Romantic era’s most “grandiose”
orchestral genre
Berlioz, Fantastic Symphony
Program symphony in five movements
Story was lurid autobiographical fantasy
• Music encouraged listeners to think it was
written under influence of opium
• Inspired by his unrequited love for
Shakespearean actress Harriet Smithson
Bold music of unprecedented originality
• Imaginative colors drawn from huge orchestra
• An idée fixe recurs in every movement
Movement Format (1)
Related to Classical symphony format
• Middle two movements reversed
• Movements IV & V unprecedented
I – Fast tempo, sonata form, slow intro
II – Moderate tempo, triple meter dance
• Waltz instead of minuet or scherzo
III – The slow movement
IV – Moderate tempo; a march
V – Fast tempo, free form follows the story
Idée Fixe (1)
Fixed idea – a term popular in medical
literature of the day
Here it is a theme that represents the
composer’s beloved (Harriet Smithson)
• Starts as a passionate, Romantic melody
Idée Fixe (2)
It recurs in all five movements
• Symbolizes each appearance of the beloved
• Transformed into a raucous parody at the
witches’ sabbath in the 5th movement
The Program
Program of the Symphony
A young musician of unhealthy sensibility and
passionate imagination poisons himself with
opium in a fit of lovesick despair. Too weak to kill
him, the dose of the drug plunges him into a
heavy sleep attended by the strangest visions,
during which his sensations, emotions, and
memories are transformed in his diseased mind
into musical thoughts and images. Even the
woman he loves becomes a melody to him, an
idée fixe, as it were, that he finds and hears
everywhere.
The Program: I
1st movement: Reveries, Passions
First he recalls the soul-sickness, the
aimless passions, the baseless
depressions and elations that he felt
before first seeing his loved one; then the
volcanic love that she instantly inspired in
him; his jealous furies; his return to
tenderness; his religious consolations.
The Program: II
2nd movement: A Ball
He encounters his beloved at a ball, in the
midst of a noisy, brilliant party.
The Program: III
3rd movement: Scene in the Country
On a summer evening in the country, he
hears two shepherds piping in dialogue.
The pastoral duet, the location, the light
rustling of trees stirred gently by the wind,
some newly conceived grounds for hope—
all this gives him a feeling of
unaccustomed calm. But she appears
again … what if she is deceiving him?
The Program: IV
4th movement: March to the Scaffold
He dreams he has killed his beloved, that
he is condemned to death and led to
execution. A march accompanies the
procession, now gloomy and wild, now
brilliant and grand. Finally the idée fixe
appears for a moment, to be cut off by the
fall of the axe.
The Program: V
Finale: Dream of a Witches’ Sabbath
He finds himself at a Witches’ Sabbath …
Unearthly sounds, groans, shrieks of
laughter, distant cries echoed by other
cries. The beloved’s melody is heard, but it
has lost its character of nobility and
timidity. It is she who comes to the
Sabbath! At her arrival, a roar of joy. She
joins in the devilish orgies. A funeral knell;
burlesque of the Dies irae.
Fourth Movement:
March to the Scaffold
Exciting, riotous march to the guillotine
Unusual form uses two main themes
• Doesn’t use usual March–Trio–March format
• Theme 1 a gloomy, wild downward scale
• Theme 2 a grand, blaring military march
Many unusual tone colors used
Coda uses opening motive of idée fixe
• The condemned composer’s final thought
• Cut short by the fall of the axe!
Fifth Movement (1):
Dream of a Witches’ Sabbath
The most audacious movement yet
• Depicts a Witches’ Sabbath
• Orchestral sound effects reign supreme
Idée fixe now treated as vulgar parody
• On piccolo clarinet with carnival ornaments
• His beloved is the guest of honor!
Fifth Movement (2):
Dream of a Witches’ Sabbath
Composer’s funeral occurs simultaneously
• Solemn Dies irae chant ridiculed by witches
Fifth Movement (3):
Dream of a Witches’ Sabbath
Raucous Witches’ Round Dance is a fugue
• Round Dance & Dies irae combine at climax
Conclusions
Typical early Romantic “grandiose” work
Program symphony for large orchestra
• Blurs the lines between music, literature,
theater, & autobiography
Cyclic work, unified by idée fixe
Fascination with supernatural, macabre
New orchestral colors, expressive effects
The often unusual forms follow the story
Only 39 years after Haydn’s Symphony 95!