162
INSTRUMENTATION
IS AT THE HEAD OF
THE MARCH
SYMPHONIE FANTASTIQUE (1830),
HECTOR BERLIOZ
T
hroughout his career,
French composer Hector
Berlioz explored the format
of the programmatic symphony—
a mood-evoking work influenced
by subjects outside of music, such
as literature and art. It was his
Symphonie fantastique, however,
composed early in his career, that
proved to be his most successful
and enduring work in the genre.
Berlioz’s inspiraton
In 1827, as a 23-year-old music
student, Berlioz went to see
a performance in Paris of
Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet
starring the Irish actress Harriet
Smithson as Juliet. It proved to be
a fateful encounter, because Berlioz
fell in love with Smithson and
would expend much energy over
the next few years pursuing her.
During the course of this
infatuation, he felt compelled to
write a piece that would describe
his heightened passion and its
attendant joys and sorrows. He
intended its performance to launch
his career with a bold stroke and
at the same time dazzle Smithson.
The resulting piece Symphonie
fantastique premiered at the Paris
Conservatoire on December 5, 1830,
and a printed synopsis of the “plot”
was supplied.
Love and death
The title suggests a symphony
of the imagination, while its
subtitle—“Episode in the life of
an artist”—hints at the work’s
autobiographical element, although
its descriptive program (which
Berlioz provided to audiences)
focuses more on fantasy than
reality. In the first movement, a
young musician awakens to find
love in the shape of an unknown
beautiful woman. Her image
IN CONTEXT
FOCUS
The programmatic
symphony
BEFORE
1808 Beethoven premieres
his Sixth Symphony, the
“Pastoral,” which the composer
insists is “more expression of
feeling than tone-painting.”
1824 Beethoven’s Ninth
Symphony ends with a choral
setting of a text taken from
German poet Friedrich
Schiller’s “Ode to Joy.”
AFTER
1848–1849 Liszt composes
Ce qu’on entend sur la
montagne, the first symphonic
poem, based on a poem by
Victor Hugo.
1857 First performance
of Liszt’s Faust Symphony,
which he dedicated to Berlioz.
No one who hears this
symphony here in Paris,
played by Berlioz’s orchestra,
can help believing that
he is hearing a marvel
without precedent.
Richard Wagner
US_162-163_Berlioz.indd 162 26/03/18 1:00 PM