SubmittedFriday, 03 May 2019
mournful destiny
Oh, mournful destiny! There are great men who have outlived their genius; but with Berlioz genius outlived desire. His genius was still there; one feels it in the sublime pages of the third act of Les Troyens à Carthage. But Berlioz had ceased to believe in his power; he had lost faith in everything. His genius was dying for want of nourishment; it was a flame above an empty tomb. At the same hour of his old age the soul of Wagner sustained its glorious flight; and, having conquered everything, it achieved a supreme victory in renouncing everything for its faith. And the divine songs of Parsifal resounded as in a splendid temple, and replied to the cries of the suffering Amfortas by the blessed words: «Selig in Glauben! Selig in Liebe!»
Berlioz’s work did not spread itself evenly over his life; it was accomplished in a few years. It was not like the course of a great river, as with Wagner and Beethoven; it was a burst of genius, whose flames lit up the whole sky for a little while, and then died gradually down.[65] Let me try to tell you about this wonderful blaze.
Some of Berlioz’s musical qualities are so striking that it is unnecessary to dwell upon them here. His instrumental colouring, so intoxicating and exciting,[66] his extraordinary discoveries concerning timbre, his inventions of new nuances (as in the famous combining of flutes and trombones in the Hostias et preces of the Requiem, and the curious use of the harmonics of violins and harps), and his huge and nebulous orchestra–all this lends itself to the most subtle expression of thought.[67]
[Footnote 65: In 1830, old Rouget de Lisle called Berlioz, «a volcano in eruption» (Mémoires, I, 158).]
[Footnote 66: M. Camille Saint-Saëns wrote in his Portraits et Souvenirs, 1900: «Whoever reads Berlioz’s scores before hearing them played can have no real idea of their effect. The instruments appear to be arranged in defiance of all common sense; and it would seem, to use professional slang, that cela ne dut pas sonner, but cela sonne wonderfully. If we find here and there obscurities of style, they do not appear in the orchestra; light streams into it and plays there as in the facets of a diamond.»]
[Footnote 67: See the excellent essay of H. Lavoix, in his Histoire de l’Instrumentation. It should be noticed that Berlioz’s observations in his Traité d’instrumentation et d’orchestration modernes (1844) have not been lost upon Richard Strauss, who has just published a German edition of the work, and some of whose most famous orchestral effects are realisations of Berlioz’s ideas.]
this was: Mournful Destiny
go to next chapter: First To Be Astonished


