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18 - Berlioz's impact in France

from Part VI - Renown

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 September 2011

Peter Bloom
Affiliation:
Smith College, Massachusetts
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Summary

“Impact” – the forceful contact or collision of one body against another – is a particularly appropriate word to describe Hector Berlioz's effect upon his contemporaries, whether the composers of his own or of the next generation, the public, or colleagues in the press. Many in France acknowledged the genius of Berlioz the musician, but in his own time true appreciation of his achievement tended to reside mainly with a few ardent admirers, for Berlioz cultivated a style that was so distinctive, subjective, and exploratory that general audiences did not embrace the bulk of his works.

In 1870, only a year after his death, a youthful Adolphe Jullien stressed the personal character of Berlioz's music by characterizing the man and his art as one and the same: “he acts, he thinks, he lives in his works. Each page of his music is made in his own image.” Younger composers, intent on building their careers, tended to avoid the risky course of adopting wholesale his innovations and individual style. In 1871 Georges Bizet expressed both the deep admiration and the wariness symptomatic of his generation's attitude toward Berlioz as a model:

[W]hat makes for success is the talent and not the idea. The public […] only understands the idea later on, but to make it to this “later on” the artist's talent has to make the road accessible to the public, by means of appealing forms, and not to put people off from the start. In such a way Auber, who had so much talent and so few ideas, was almost always understood, while Berlioz, who had genius but no talent, almost never was.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2000

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