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Berlioz in 1845

Les nuits d'été (Summer Nights), Op. 7, is a song cycle by the French composer Hector Berlioz. It is a setting of six poems by Théophile Gautier. The cycle, completed in 1841, was originally for soloist and piano accompaniment. Berlioz orchestrated one of the songs in 1843, and did the same for the other five in 1856. The cycle was neglected for many years, but during the 20th century it became, and has remained, one of the composer's most popular works. The full orchestral version is more frequently performed in concert and on record than the piano original. The theme of the work is the progress of love, from youthful innocence to loss and finally renewal.

Background

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Berlioz and the poet Théophile Gautier were neighbours and friends. Gautier wrote, "Berlioz represents the romantic musical idea … unexpected effects in sound, tumultuous and Shakespearean depth of passion."[1] It is possible that Berlioz read Gauthier's collection La comédie de la mort (The Comedy of Death) before its publication in 1838.[2] Gautier had no objection to his friend's setting six poems from that volume, and Berlioz began in March 1840.[3] The title Nuits d'été was Berlioz's invention, and it is not clear why he chose it: the first song is specifically set in spring rather than summer. The writer Annagret Fauser suggests that Berlioz may have been influenced by the preface to a collection of short stories by his friend Joseph Méry, Les nuits de Londres in which the author writes of summer nights in which he and his friends sat outside until dawn telling stories.[4] In a 1989 study of Berlioz, D Kern Holoman suggests that the title is an allusion to Shakespeare, whose works Berlioz loved.[5]

Gautier in 1839

The cycle was complete in its original version for voice (mezzo-soprano or tenor) and piano by 1841.[6] Berlioz later made arrangements for baritone, contralto, or soprano, and piano.[7] The piano version is not as often performed in concert or on record as the orchestrated score, which Berlioz arranged between 1843 and 1856.[8] David Cairns wrote in 1988 that the success of the piano version was impeded by the inferior quality of the piano part in the published score: it is not Berlioz's own, and Cairns described it as "a clumsy, inauthentic piece of work".[9]

In 1843 Berlioz orchestrated the fourth song, "Absence" for his lover, Marie Recio, who premiered it in Leipzig on 23 February 1843; it was not until 1856, that he returned to Les nuits d'été, arranging an orchestral version of "La spectre de la rose" for the mezzo-soprano Anna Bockholtz-Falconi. The publisher Jakob Rieter-Biedermann was in the audience for the premiere, and, much impressed, prevailed on Berlioz to orchestrate the rest of the cycle.[10] The orchestration left the existing melodic and harmonic writing generally unchanged, but for "La spectre de la rose" the composer added an introduction for muted solo cello, flute and clarinet; the orchestration of this song, unlike the other five, includes a harp.[11]

The original piano version had a single dedicatee – Louise Bertin, whose father, Louis Bertin, was editor of the Journal des débats, for which Berlioz wrote musical criticism and other articles.[2] Each of the six songs of the orchestral cycle was dedicated individually, to singers well known in Germany, some of whom had performed Berlioz's music there: Louise Wolf ("Villanelle"), Anna Bockholtz-Falconi ("La spectre de la rose"), Hans von Milde ("Sur les lagunes"), Madeleine Nottès ("Absence"), Friedrich Caspari ("Au cimetière") and Rosa von Milde ("L'île inconnue").[2]

For the orchestral version, Berlioz transposed the second and third songs to lower keys.[12][n 1] When this version was published, Berlioz specified different voices for the various songs: mezzo-soprano or tenor for "Villanelle", contralto for "Le spectre de la rose", baritone (or optionally contralto or mezzo) for "Sur les lagunes", mezzo or tenor for "Absence", tenor for "Au cimitière", and mezzo or tenor for "L'île inconnue".[14] The cycle is nevertheless usually sung by a single soloist, most often a soprano or mezzo-soprano.[15] When the cycle is sung by sopranos the second and third songs are usually transposed back to their original pitches; when lower voices sing the cycle some other songs are often transposed downwards, with, in Rushton's view, particularly deleterious effect in the first song, the lighthearted "Villanelle".[16]

[The poems] form a narrative which leads from a spring-born joie de vivre (Villanelle) and a loss of innocence (Le spectre de la rose), to the death of a beloved (Sur les lagunes), a dirge (Absence), the obliteration of her memory (Au Cimetière), and the beginning of a new future (L'île inconnue).

Annagret Fauser[17]

Although Berlioz wrote more than fifty songs, twenty of them with orchestral accompaniment, those in Les nuits d'été are the only ones published as a set.[18] They are not a cycle on the German model of Schubert's Winterreise or Schumann's Dichterliebe, with narrative and thematic continuity, but form a unified whole by virtue of the single authorship of the words and the composer's use throughout of delicate, atmospheric musical shading.[19] The structure of the cycle has four sombre songs framed by exuberant opening and closing ones. The critic A. E. F. Dickinson wrote in a 1969 study, "Their common theme is nominally love unrequited or lost, symbolizing, arguably, an ache for vanished or unattainable beauty. But their musical order is apparently fortuitous, and forms an acceptable, rather than a compulsive, association."[18] Berlioz's innovative creation of an orchestral song cycle had few successors until Mahler took the genre up in the late 19th century.[20]

As far as is known, the orchestral cycle was not performed in its entirety during the composer's lifetime.[21] The work was neglected for many years, but during the twentieth century it was rediscovered and has become one of Berlioz's best-loved works.[20]

Music

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By Berlioz's standards the orchestration is on a modest scale. There is no percussion, and the forces stipulated are the normal string section of violins, violas, cellos and double-basses; woodwind: two flutes, two clarinets, two bassoons, one oboe; brass: three horns; harp.[22]

Villanelle

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"Villanelle": text and translation

Allegretto
Key: A major; orchestration: 2 flutes, 1 oboe, 2 clarinets in A, 1 bassoon, strings.[23]

The first of the set, "Villanelle" is a celebration of spring and love. It tells of the pleasures of wandering together in the woods to gather wild strawberries, returning home with hands entwined. The setting is strophic; Berlioz maintains the villanelle rhythm of the original poem, while varying the orchestra accompaniment with string counterpoints, and, at the end of each verse, a bassoon solo , pitched higher at each iteration. Rushton comments that these variations "add to the sense of the natural variety and freshness of spring".[12]

Le spectre de la rose

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"Le spectre de la rose": text and translation

Adagio un poco lento et dolce assai.
Key: B major; orchestration: 2 flutes, 1 oboe, 2 clarinets in A, 2 horns in E, 1 harp, strings.[24]

"Le spectre de la rose" tells of a girl's dreams of the ghost of the rose she had worn to a ball the previous day. Although the rose has died, it has ascended to paradise; to have died on the girl's breast was a fate that kings might envy.[12] The setting is through-composed.[17] In a 1989 study of Berlioz, D Kern Holoman describes the song as "among the most perfect expressions of French Romanticism".[25]

Sur les lagunes: Lamento

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"Sur les lagunes": text and translation

Andantino
Key: F minor; orchestration: 2 flutes, 2 clarinets in B, 2 bassoons, 1 horn in C , 1 horn in F, strings. [26]

"Sur les lagunes: Lamento" (On the Lagoons: Lament), with its sombre harmonies and orchestration is imbued with melancholy; the undulating accompaniment suggests the movement of the waves. The poem is the lament of a Venetian boatman at the loss of his beloved, and the pain of sailing out to sea unloved.[27] This is the second of the two through-composed songs in the cycle.[17]

Absence

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"Absence": text and translation

Adagio
Key: F sharp minor; orchestration: 2 flutes, 1 oboe, 2 clarinets in A, 1 horn in A, 1 horn in D, strings. [28]

The rhetorical Absence pleads for the return of the beloved. The Berlioz scholar Julian Rushton suggests that unlike the other five songs, this one makes use of existing music, written for an abandoned cantata, Erigone. Rushton comments that if this is so, it may explain why in this song alone Berlioz cut and rearranged Gautier's verses.[29] This song, and Au cimitière, which follows, are strophic, with the form ABA.[17]

Au cimetière: Clair de lune

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"Au cimetière": text and translation

Andantino non troppo lento
Key: D major; Orchestration: 2 flutes, 2 clarinets in A; strings. [30]

"Au cimetière: Clair de lune" (At the Cemetery: Moonlight), is a further lament, with the bereaved lover now more distant from the memory of his beloved, and perturbed by a ghostly vision of her.[17]

L'île inconnue

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L'île inconnue: text and English translation

Allegro spiritoso
Key: F major; orchestration: 2 flutes, 1 oboe, 2 clarinets in B, 2 bassoons, 1 horn in F, 1 horn in C, 1 horn in B, strings. [31]

"L'île inconnue" (The Unknown Island) hints at the unattainable – a place where love can be eternal. Rushton describes the song as "cheerfully ironic", set by Berlioz "with a Venetian swing".[32] This closing song is strophic with the form ABACA'DA".[17]

Recordings

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The growing popularity of the work was reflected in the number of complete recordings issued in the LP era. Among those are versions sung by Eleanor Steber, Suzanne Danco and Victoria de los Ángeles in mono recordings and Régine Crespin, Leontyne Price and Janet Baker in stereo. More recent recordings have featured Véronique Gens, Anne Sofie von Otter, Bernarda Fink and Lorraine Hunt Lieberson. Recordings by male singers include those by Nicolai Gedda and José Van Dam. The piano version has been recorded from time to time, and there have been two studio recordings of the orchestral version with multiple singers, as stipulated in the orchestral score; these were conducted by Sir Colin Davis and Pierre Boulez. Conductors of other versions have included Ernest Ansermet, John Barbirolli, James Levine, Charles Munch and Fritz Reiner.[33]

Notes, references and sources

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Notes

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  1. ^ From D to B and G minor to F minor respectively.[13]

References

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  1. ^ Blakeman, p. 3
  2. ^ a b c Anderson, p. 3
  3. ^ Holoman, p. 275
  4. ^ Fauser, pp. 119–120
  5. ^ Holoman, pp. 92–93 and 275
  6. ^ Rushton, p. 165
  7. ^ Gérard, p. 6
  8. ^ Cairns, pp. 3 and 12
  9. ^ Cairns, p. 12
  10. ^ Holoman, p. 514
  11. ^ Anderson, p. 4
  12. ^ a b c Rushton, Julian "Hector Berlioz", Linn Records, 2013
  13. ^ Cairns, p. 5
  14. ^ Cairns, p. 4
  15. ^ Cairns, p. 6
  16. ^ Rushton, pp. 165–166
  17. ^ a b c d e f Fauser, p. 119
  18. ^ a b Dickinson, A E F. "Berlioz's Songs", The Musical Quarterly, July 1969, pp. 329–343 (subscription required)
  19. ^ Cairns, pp. 4–5
  20. ^ a b Rushton, p. 45
  21. ^ Holoman, p. 367
  22. ^ Berlioz, I–VI
  23. ^ Berlioz, I
  24. ^ Berlioz II
  25. ^ Holoman, p. 239
  26. ^ Berlioz III
  27. ^ Holoman, p. 516
  28. ^ Berlioz IV
  29. ^ Rushton (2001), pp. 45–46
  30. ^ Berlioz V
  31. ^ Berlioz VI
  32. ^ Rushton (2001), p. 45
  33. ^ Cairns, p. 3; and "Les nuits d'été", WorldCat, retrieved 2 July 2015

Sources

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  • Anderson, Keith (2005). Notes to Naxos CD 8. 557274. Naxos Records. OCLC 232300936.
  • Berlioz, Hector; Théophile Gautier (1904) [1856]. Les nuits d'été. Leipzig: Breitkopf & Härtel. OCLC 611290556.
  • Blakeman, Edward (1989). Notes to Chandos CD Chan 8735. Chandos Records. OCLC 22246622.
  • Cairns, David (1986). "Berlioz". In Alan Blyth (ed.). Song on Record. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-36173-6.
  • Fauser, Annagret (2000). "The songs". In Peter Bloom (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to Berlioz. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-59638-1.
  • Holoman, D Kern (1989). Berlioz. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-06778-3.
  • Rushton, Julian (2001). The Music of Berlioz. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-816690-0.