Rage, fury, opium-addled love: Berlioz Symphonie Fantastique
MEDIA RELEASE
26 March
2019
orchestrawellington.co.nz
Rage, fury and
opium-addled love in Orchestra Wellington’s
Berlioz
Symphonie Fantastique
Orchestra Wellington
is beginning its Epic 2019 season with the
original
anthem to sex, drugs and rock and roll.
The French
composer used opium to help fire his imagination
in
composing a piece that ripped through the classical
music world like
an earthquake.
The epic Symphonie
Fantastique, to be performed in the season’s opener
at
the Michael Fowler Centre on Friday 12th April, sees the
French
composer utilising one of the largest orchestras
of its time.
Over 150 years before Lou Reed sang about
heroin, Berlioz presented
his audience with programme
notes describing a lovesick, opium addled
artist
progressing through “Reveries and passions”, “A
Ball”, a
“Scene in the Country,” a “March to the
Scaffold,” and finally a
“Witches
Sabbath.”
Whether he was able to do that because, or in
spite of his altered
mental state, there’s no doubt
that Berlioz’s 1830 masterpiece
continues to delight,
beguile and even frighten audiences to this day.
The
symphony’s catalyst is most likely Belioz’s doomed love
for an
Irish actress, who has a tune all of her own which
the composer uses
to tie the whole piece
together.
It’s full of charm and grace in the first
movement, wistful in the
second and third, hovers above
the “artist” as he’s about to lose his
head in the
fourth, and is a banshee howl in the finale.
Also on the
bill is the sequel Berlioz composed to
Symphonie
Fantastique, titled Lelio.
Performing and
narrating Lelio is Outrageous Fortune and
Shortland
Street actor Andrew Laing, with tenor Declan
Cudd, baritone Daniel
O’Connor and the Orpheus Choir of
Wellington.
Lelio, the Return to Life, was in typical
Berlioz over the top fashion
devised for an invisible
orchestra - the musicians were to perform
behind a
lowered curtain.
These two works are rarely performed
together. Orchestra Wellington’s
opener for 2019 under
the baton of Marc Taddei – on a Friday night, is
a
thriller.
ORCHESTRA WELLINGTON presents
Fantastic
Symphonies
Marc Taddei – Music Director
Andrew Laing
– Narrator
Declan Cudd – Tenor
Daniel O’Connor
– Baritone
The Orpheus Choir of Wellington
Berlioz -
Symphonie Fantastique
Berlioz -
Lelio