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La damnation de Faust

La damnation de Faust (English: The Damnation of Faust), Op. 24 is a work for four solo voices, full seven-part chorus, large children's chorus and orchestra[1] by the French composer Hector Berlioz. He called it a "légende dramatique" (dramatic legend).[2] It was first performed at the Opéra-Comique in Paris on 6 December 1846.

"The Damnation of Faust" redirects here. For the 1903 film, see The Damnation of Faust (film).

La damnation de Faust

The Damnation of Faust

24

French

1845 (1845)

6 December 1846 (1846-12-06)

  • four soloists
  • children's chorus
  • seven-part choir
  • orchestra

Background and composition history[edit]

The French composer was inspired by a translation of Goethe's dramatic poem Faust and produced a musical work that, like the masterpiece on which it is based, defies easy categorisation. Conceived at various times as a free-form oratorio and as an opera (Berlioz ultimately called it a "légende dramatique") its travelogue form and cosmic perspective have made it an extreme challenge to stage as an opera. Berlioz himself was eager to see the work staged, but once he did, he conceded that the production techniques of his time were not up to the task of bringing the work to dramatic life. Most of the work's fame has come through concert performances.


Berlioz read Goethe's Faust, Part One in 1828, in Gérard de Nerval's translation; "this marvellous book fascinated me from the first", he recalled in his Memoirs. "I could not put it down. I read it incessantly, at meals, in the theatre, in the street." He was so impressed that a suite entitled Eight Scenes from Faust became his Opus 1 (1829), though he later recalled all the copies of it he could find. He returned to the material in 1845, to make a larger work, with some additional text by Almire Gandonnière to Berlioz's specifications, that he first called a "concert opera", and as it expanded, finally a "dramatic legend".


He worked on the score during his concert tour of 1845, adding his own text for "Nature immense, impénétrable et fière"—Faust's climactic invocation of all nature—and incorporating the Rákóczi March, which had been a thunderous success at a concert in Pest, Hungary, on 15 February 1846.[3]

Performance history[edit]

Its first performance at the Opéra-Comique, Paris, 6 December 1846, did not meet with critical acclaim, perhaps due to its halfway status between opera and cantata; the public was apathetic, and two performances (and a cancelled third) rendered a financial setback for Berlioz: "Nothing in my career as an artist wounded me more deeply than this unexpected indifference", he remembered.[4]


La damnation de Faust is performed regularly in concert halls, since its first successful complete performance in concert in Paris, in 1877. Sir Charles Hallé gave the first complete performance in England on 5 February 1880.[5] It is occasionally staged as an opera, for the first time in Opéra de Monte-Carlo on 18 February 1893, where it was produced by its director Raoul Gunsbourg with Jean de Reszke singing the role of Faust and Rose Caron, Marguerite. The Metropolitan Opera premiered it first in concert (2 February 1896) and then on stage (the United States stage premiere on 7 December 1906) and revived it in concert at Carnegie Hall on 10 November 1996 (repeated on tour in Tokyo the next year). The company presented a staged production on 7 November 2008, produced and directed by Robert Lepage, with innovative techniques of computer-generated stage imagery that responds to the performers' voices.[6] Filmmaker Terry Gilliam made his opera debut at London's English National Opera in May 2011, directing The Damnation of Faust.[7] The production received positive reviews in the British press.[8][9][10] In 2015 the Opéra National de Paris reimagined the role of Faust by assuming the persona of English scientist Stephen Hawking for that role. This version of the work also reinterpreted the metaphysical journey Faust is sent on by Méphistophélès in relation to the Mars One project; portraying the dilemma of man leaving earth to populate Mars.[11] The Paris Opera cooperated with NASA, ESA, CNES. and film companies which produce environmental films for the production of Berlioz's work.[12]


Three instrumental passages, the Marche Hongroise (Hungarian March), Ballet des sylphes, and Menuet des follets are sometimes extracted and performed as "Three Orchestral Pieces from La damnation de Faust."[13]

3 (all doubling piccolo), 2 oboes (second doubling English horn), 2 clarinets (in C/A/B), bass clarinet in B, 4 bassoons

flutes

4 (in all keys), 2 trumpets in C/D/F, 2 cornets in A/B, 3 trombones, 2 tubas (originally scored for one ophicleide and one tuba)

horns

snare drum, bass drum, cymbals, suspended cymbal, triangle, tamtam, bell (sounding D, F, A, or C)

timpani

2 [17]

harps

: 15 violins I, 15 violins II, 10 violas, 10 violoncellos, 9 double basses

strings

The orchestral score requires:[1]

The piece "L'Éléphant" (The Elephant) from 's The Carnival of the Animals (1886) uses a theme from the "Danse des sylphes", played on a double bass.

Camille Saint-Saëns

: Scores at the International Music Score Library Project

La damnation de Faust

(in French)

Libretto

by Jacques Barzun. Special Disc Jockey pressing recorded Autumn 1954

On Berlioz's Damnation of Faust

– Orchestre National du Capitole – Wiener SingvereinTugan Sokhiev

La damnation de Faust 22. Februar – medici.TV