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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.

La damnation de Faust
Légende dramatique by Hector Berlioz
Hector Berlioz
EnglishThe Damnation of Faust
Opus24
LanguageFrench
Based onGoethe's Faust
Composed1845 (1845)
Performed6 December 1846 (1846-12-06)
Scoring
  • four soloists
  • children's chorus
  • seven-part choir
  • orchestra

Background and composition history

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

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; 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.[5] Filmmaker Terry Gilliam made his opera debut at London's English National Opera in May 2011, directing The Damnation of Faust.[6] The production received positive reviews in the British press.[7][8][9] 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.[10] The Paris Opera cooperated with NASA, ESA, CNES. and film companies which produce environmental films for the production of Berlioz's work.[11]

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."[12]

Roles

Roles, voice types, premiere cast
Role[1] Voice type[1] Premiere cast,[13] 6 December 1846
Conductor: Hector Berlioz
Marguerite, a young woman mezzo-soprano Hortense Duflot-Maillard [Wikidata]
Faust, an aging scholar tenor Gustave-Hippolyte Roger
Méphistophélès, the Devil disguised as a gentleman baritone or bass[1][14] Léonard Hermann-Léon
Brander, a student bass Henri Descheynes[15]
Celestial Voice soprano
Peasants, gnomes and sylphs, soldiers and students, demons and the damned, celestial spirits

Instrumentation

The orchestral score requires:[1]

Synopsis

Part I

The aging scholar Faust contemplates the renewal of nature. Hearing peasants sing and dance, he realizes that their simple happiness is something he will never experience. An army marches past in the distance (Hungarian March). Faust doesn't understand why the soldiers are so enthusiastic about glory and fame.

Part II

Depressed, Faust has returned to his study. Even the search for wisdom can no longer inspire him. Tired of life, he is about to commit suicide when the sound of church bells and an Easter hymn remind him of his youth, when he still had faith in religion. Suddenly Méphistophélès appears, ironically commenting on Faust's apparent conversion. He offers to take him on a journey, promising him the restoration of his youth, knowledge, and the fulfillment of all his wishes. Faust accepts.

Méphistophélès and Faust arrive at Auerbach's tavern in Leipzig, where Brander, a student, sings a song about a rat whose high life in a kitchen is ended by a dose of poison. The other guests offer an ironic "Amen", and Méphistophélès continues with another song about a flea that brings his relatives to infest a whole royal court (Song of the Flea). Disgusted by the vulgarity of it all, Faust demands to be taken somewhere else.

On a meadow by the Elbe, Méphistophélès shows Faust a dream vision of a beautiful woman named Marguerite, causing Faust to fall in love with her. He calls out her name, and Méphistophélès promises to lead Faust to her. Together with a group of students and soldiers, they enter the town where she lives.

Part III

Faust and Méphistophélès hide in Marguerite's room. Faust feels that he will find in her, his ideal of a pure and innocent woman ("Merci, doux crépuscule!"). Marguerite enters and sings a ballad about the King of Thule, who always remained sadly faithful to his lost love ("Autrefois, un roi de Thulé"). Méphistophélès summons spirits to enchant and deceive the girl and sings a sarcastic serenade outside her window, predicting her loss of innocence. When the spirits have vanished, Faust steps forward. Marguerite admits that she has dreamed of him, just as he has dreamed of her, and they declare their love for each other. Just then, Méphistophélès bursts in, warning them that the girl's reputation must be saved: the neighbors have learned that there is a man in Marguerite's room and have called her mother to the scene. After a hasty goodbye, Faust and Méphistophélès escape.

Part IV

Faust has seduced, then abandoned Marguerite, who still awaits his return ("D'amour l'ardente flamme"). She can hear soldiers and students in the distance, which reminds her of the night Faust first came to her house. But this time he is not among them.

Faust calls upon nature to cure him of his world-weariness ("Nature immense, impénétrable et fière"). Méphistophélès appears and tells him that Marguerite is in prison. While awaiting Faust's return, she has given her mother the sleeping potion Faust had previously provided to calm her mother during their nights of love, and used it so often that she has killed the old woman, and now is to be hanged the next day. Faust panics, but Méphistophélès claims he can save her—if Faust relinquishes his soul to him. Unable to think of anything but saving Marguerite, Faust agrees. The two ride off on a pair of black horses.

Thinking they are on their way to Marguerite, Faust becomes terrified when he sees demonic apparitions. The landscape becomes more and more horrible and grotesque, and Faust finally realizes that Méphistophélès has taken him directly into hell. Demons and damned spirits greet Méphistophélès in a mysterious infernal language and welcome Faust among them.

Hell has fallen silent after Faust's arrival—the torment he suffers is unspeakable. Marguerite is saved and welcomed into heaven.

Recordings

Complete recordings include (vocal parts in order: Faust, Marguerite, Méphistophélès):

David Poleri, Suzanne Danco, Martial Singher, Donald Gramm, McHenry Boatwright
Boston Symphony Orchestra, Harvard Glee Club, Radcliffe Choral Society
Conductor: Charles Munch
Recorded: 21–22 February 1954, Symphony Hall, Boston[17] Label: RCA Red Seal Records

Richard Verreau, Consuelo Rubio, Michel Roux, Pierre Mollet
Lamoureux Concert Association Orchestra, Chorale Élisabeth Brasseur [fr].
Conductor: Igor Markevitch
Recorded Salle de la Mutualité, Paris, May 1959 – Label: Deutsche Grammophon

André Turp, Régine Crespin, Michel Roux, John Shirley-Quirk
London Symphony Orchestra and Chorus
Conducted by Pierre Monteux
Recorded Royal Festival Hall, 8 March 1962 – BBC Legends BBCL 40062

Nicolai Gedda, Janet Baker, Gabriel Bacquier, Pierre Thau, Maria Peronne
Orchestre de Paris, Choeurs du Théâtre National de l'Opéra
Conductor: Georges Prêtre
Recorded: October 1969, Salle Wagram, Paris
Label: EMI Classics

Nicolai Gedda, Josephine Veasey, Jules Bastin, Richard Van Allan, Gillian Knight
London Symphony Orchestra and Chorus, Ambrosian Singers and Wandsworth School Boys' Choir
Conducted by Colin Davis
Recorded: Wembley Town Hall, July 1973 – Philips

Kenneth Riegel, Frederica von Stade, José van Dam, Malcolm King
Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Chorus
Conductor: Sir Georg Solti
Recorded: May 1981, Medinah Temple, Chicago
Label: Decca / London
For full details, see La damnation de Faust (Georg Solti recording)

Thomas Moser, Susan Graham, José van Dam, Frédéric Caton
Lyon Opera Orchestra and Chorus
Conductor: Kent Nagano
Audio CD (7 August 1995)
Label: Warner Classics UK / Erato

Keith Lewis, Anne Sofie von Otter, Bryn Terfel, Victor von Halem
Philharmonia Orchestra and Chorus
Conducted by Myung-Whun Chung
Audio CD (11 August 1998)
Label: Deutsche Grammophon

Bryan Hymel, Karen Cargill, Christopher Purves, Gábor Bretz
London Symphony Orchestra and Chorus
Conductor: Sir Simon Rattle
Hybrid SACD (8 March 2019)
Label: LSO Live!

Michael Spyres, Joyce DiDonato, Nicolas Curjal, Alexandre Duhamel
Orchestre Philarmonique de Strasbourg, Les Petits Chanteurs de Strasbourg, Maitrise de l'Opéra national du Rhin
Conductor John Nelson (25-27 IV 2019)
Label Erato Warner classics

Parodies

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Berlioz, Hector (1998). La damnation de Faust: Dramatic legend in full score. Mineola, New York: Dover Publications, Inc. ISBN 0-486-40169-3.
  2. ^ Damnation de Faust, La by D. Kern Holoman, Grove Music Online, 1 December 1992 (subscription required)
  3. ^ Berlioz, Memoirs, translated by Michel Austin, ch. 54 (excerpts).
  4. ^ Memoirs, ch. 54.
  5. ^ "Techno-Alchemy at the Opera" by Daniel J. Wakin, The New York Times, 7 November 2008]
  6. ^ . ENO. Archived from the original on 11 October 2010. Retrieved 23 October 2010.
  7. ^ Rupert Christiansen (9 May 2011). "Terry Gilliam's first opera is a damned fine glimpse of the abyss". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 10 May 2011.
  8. ^ Andrew Clements (7 May 2011). "The Damnation of Faust – review". The Guardian. Retrieved 10 May 2011.
  9. ^ Jessica Duchen (9 May 2011). "The Damnation of Faust, English National Opera". The Independent. Retrieved 10 May 2011.
  10. ^ Stephen J. Mudge (December 2015). "La damnation de Faust". Opera News.
  11. ^ Simon Hatab (2018). "Portfolio | Who is the Faust of the 21st century?". operadeparis.fr.
  12. ^ "La damnation de Faust: Three Orchestral Pieces". The Hector Berlioz Website. Retrieved 25 October 2010.
  13. ^ Unless otherwise noted, Casaglia, Gherardo (2005). "La damnation de Faust, 6 December 1846". L'Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia (in Italian).
  14. ^ The role of Méphistophélès is written with variants suitable for the two voices.
  15. ^ D. Kern Holoman, Berlioz (Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1989), p. 340.
  16. ^ For "Le Ciel" (the penultimate number of part IV) Berlioz requests 4 or 5 instruments per part.
  17. ^ OCLC 9883790

External links

damnation, faust, damnation, faust, redirects, here, 1903, film, damnation, faust, film, english, damnation, faust, work, four, solo, voices, full, seven, part, chorus, large, children, chorus, orchestra, french, composer, hector, berlioz, called, légende, dra. The Damnation of Faust redirects here For the 1903 film see The Damnation of Faust film 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 legende dramatique dramatic legend 2 It was first performed at the Opera Comique in Paris on 6 December 1846 La damnation de FaustLegende dramatique by Hector BerliozHector BerliozEnglishThe Damnation of FaustOpus24LanguageFrenchBased onGoethe s FaustComposed1845 1845 Performed6 December 1846 1846 12 06 Scoringfour soloistschildren s chorusseven part choirorchestra Contents 1 Background and composition history 2 Performance history 3 Roles 4 Instrumentation 5 Synopsis 5 1 Part I 5 2 Part II 5 3 Part III 5 4 Part IV 6 Recordings 7 Parodies 8 References 9 External linksBackground and composition history EditThe 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 legende 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 Gerard 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 Gandonniere 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 impenetrable et fiere Faust s climactic invocation of all nature and incorporating the Rakoczi March which had been a thunderous success at a concert in Pest Hungary on 15 February 1846 3 Performance history EditIts first performance at the Opera 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 it is occasionally staged as an opera for the first time in Opera 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 5 Filmmaker Terry Gilliam made his opera debut at London s English National Opera in May 2011 directing The Damnation of Faust 6 The production received positive reviews in the British press 7 8 9 In 2015 the Opera 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 Mephistopheles in relation to the Mars One project portraying the dilemma of man leaving earth to populate Mars 10 The Paris Opera cooperated with NASA ESA CNES and film companies which produce environmental films for the production of Berlioz s work 11 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 12 Roles EditRoles voice types premiere cast Role 1 Voice type 1 Premiere cast 13 6 December 1846Conductor Hector BerliozMarguerite a young woman mezzo soprano Hortense Duflot Maillard Wikidata Faust an aging scholar tenor Gustave Hippolyte RogerMephistopheles the Devil disguised as a gentleman baritone or bass 1 14 Leonard Hermann LeonBrander a student bass Henri Descheynes 15 Celestial Voice sopranoPeasants gnomes and sylphs soldiers and students demons and the damned celestial spiritsInstrumentation EditThe orchestral score requires 1 3 flutes all doubling piccolo 2 oboes second doubling English horn 2 clarinets in C A B bass clarinet in B 4 bassoons 4 horns 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 timpani snare drum bass drum cymbals suspended cymbal triangle tamtam bell sounding D F A or C 2 harps 16 strings 15 violins I 15 violins II 10 violas 10 violoncellos 9 double bassesSynopsis Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article Air of Faust Part I Edit Marche Hongroise Hungarian March source source Played by the U S Marine Band in 1995 for the album Director s Choice 4 57 Problems playing this file See media help The aging scholar Faust contemplates the renewal of nature Hearing peasants sing and dance he realizes that their simple happiness is something he will never experience An army marches past in the distance Hungarian March Faust doesn t understand why the soldiers are so enthusiastic about glory and fame Part II Edit Depressed Faust has returned to his study Even the search for wisdom can no longer inspire him Tired of life he is about to commit suicide when the sound of church bells and an Easter hymn remind him of his youth when he still had faith in religion Suddenly Mephistopheles appears ironically commenting on Faust s apparent conversion He offers to take him on a journey promising him the restoration of his youth knowledge and the fulfillment of all his wishes Faust accepts Mephistopheles and Faust arrive at Auerbach s tavern in Leipzig where Brander a student sings a song about a rat whose high life in a kitchen is ended by a dose of poison The other guests offer an ironic Amen and Mephistopheles continues with another song about a flea that brings his relatives to infest a whole royal court Song of the Flea Disgusted by the vulgarity of it all Faust demands to be taken somewhere else On a meadow by the Elbe Mephistopheles shows Faust a dream vision of a beautiful woman named Marguerite causing Faust to fall in love with her He calls out her name and Mephistopheles promises to lead Faust to her Together with a group of students and soldiers they enter the town where she lives Part III Edit Faust and Mephistopheles hide in Marguerite s room Faust feels that he will find in her his ideal of a pure and innocent woman Merci doux crepuscule Marguerite enters and sings a ballad about the King of Thule who always remained sadly faithful to his lost love Autrefois un roi de Thule Mephistopheles summons spirits to enchant and deceive the girl and sings a sarcastic serenade outside her window predicting her loss of innocence When the spirits have vanished Faust steps forward Marguerite admits that she has dreamed of him just as he has dreamed of her and they declare their love for each other Just then Mephistopheles bursts in warning them that the girl s reputation must be saved the neighbors have learned that there is a man in Marguerite s room and have called her mother to the scene After a hasty goodbye Faust and Mephistopheles escape Part IV Edit Faust has seduced then abandoned Marguerite who still awaits his return D amour l ardente flamme She can hear soldiers and students in the distance which reminds her of the night Faust first came to her house But this time he is not among them Faust calls upon nature to cure him of his world weariness Nature immense impenetrable et fiere Mephistopheles appears and tells him that Marguerite is in prison While awaiting Faust s return she has given her mother the sleeping potion Faust had previously provided to calm her mother during their nights of love and used it so often that she has killed the old woman and now is to be hanged the next day Faust panics but Mephistopheles claims he can save her if Faust relinquishes his soul to him Unable to think of anything but saving Marguerite Faust agrees The two ride off on a pair of black horses Thinking they are on their way to Marguerite Faust becomes terrified when he sees demonic apparitions The landscape becomes more and more horrible and grotesque and Faust finally realizes that Mephistopheles has taken him directly into hell Demons and damned spirits greet Mephistopheles in a mysterious infernal language and welcome Faust among them Hell has fallen silent after Faust s arrival the torment he suffers is unspeakable Marguerite is saved and welcomed into heaven Recordings EditComplete recordings include vocal parts in order Faust Marguerite Mephistopheles David Poleri Suzanne Danco Martial Singher Donald Gramm McHenry BoatwrightBoston Symphony Orchestra Harvard Glee Club Radcliffe Choral Society Conductor Charles Munch Recorded 21 22 February 1954 Symphony Hall Boston 17 Label RCA Red Seal RecordsRichard Verreau Consuelo Rubio Michel Roux Pierre Mollet Lamoureux Concert Association Orchestra Chorale Elisabeth Brasseur fr Conductor Igor Markevitch Recorded Salle de la Mutualite Paris May 1959 Label Deutsche GrammophonAndre Turp Regine Crespin Michel Roux John Shirley QuirkLondon Symphony Orchestra and Chorus Conducted by Pierre Monteux Recorded Royal Festival Hall 8 March 1962 BBC Legends BBCL 40062Nicolai Gedda Janet Baker Gabriel Bacquier Pierre Thau Maria PeronneOrchestre de Paris Choeurs du Theatre National de l Opera Conductor Georges Pretre Recorded October 1969 Salle Wagram Paris Label EMI Classics Nicolai Gedda Josephine Veasey Jules Bastin Richard Van Allan Gillian KnightLondon Symphony Orchestra and Chorus Ambrosian Singers and Wandsworth School Boys Choir Conducted by Colin Davis Recorded Wembley Town Hall July 1973 PhilipsKenneth Riegel Frederica von Stade Jose van Dam Malcolm KingChicago Symphony Orchestra and Chorus Conductor Sir Georg Solti Recorded May 1981 Medinah Temple Chicago Label Decca London For full details see La damnation de Faust Georg Solti recording Thomas Moser Susan Graham Jose van Dam Frederic Caton Lyon Opera Orchestra and Chorus Conductor Kent Nagano Audio CD 7 August 1995 Label Warner Classics UK Erato Keith Lewis Anne Sofie von Otter Bryn Terfel Victor von HalemPhilharmonia Orchestra and Chorus Conducted by Myung Whun Chung Audio CD 11 August 1998 Label Deutsche GrammophonBryan Hymel Karen Cargill Christopher Purves Gabor BretzLondon Symphony Orchestra and Chorus Conductor Sir Simon Rattle Hybrid SACD 8 March 2019 Label LSO Live Michael Spyres Joyce DiDonato Nicolas Curjal Alexandre Duhamel Orchestre Philarmonique de Strasbourg Les Petits Chanteurs de Strasbourg Maitrise de l Opera national du Rhin Conductor John Nelson 25 27 IV 2019 Label Erato Warner classicsParodies EditThe piece L Elephant The Elephant from Camille Saint Saens s The Carnival of the Animals 1886 uses a theme from the Danse des sylphes played on a double bass References Edit a b c d e Berlioz Hector 1998 La damnation de Faust Dramatic legend in full score Mineola New York Dover Publications Inc ISBN 0 486 40169 3 Damnation de Faust La by D Kern Holoman Grove Music Online 1 December 1992 subscription required Berlioz Memoirs translated by Michel Austin ch 54 excerpts Memoirs ch 54 Techno Alchemy at the Opera by Daniel J Wakin The New York Times 7 November 2008 The Damnation of Faust ENO Archived from the original on 11 October 2010 Retrieved 23 October 2010 Rupert Christiansen 9 May 2011 Terry Gilliam s first opera is a damned fine glimpse of the abyss The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 10 May 2011 Andrew Clements 7 May 2011 The Damnation of Faust review The Guardian Retrieved 10 May 2011 Jessica Duchen 9 May 2011 The Damnation of Faust English National Opera The Independent Retrieved 10 May 2011 Stephen J Mudge December 2015 La damnation de Faust Opera News Simon Hatab 2018 Portfolio Who is the Faust of the 21st century operadeparis fr La damnation de Faust Three Orchestral Pieces The Hector Berlioz Website Retrieved 25 October 2010 Unless otherwise noted Casaglia Gherardo 2005 La damnation de Faust 6 December 1846 L Almanacco di Gherardo Casaglia in Italian The role of Mephistopheles is written with variants suitable for the two voices D Kern Holoman Berlioz Cambridge Massachusetts 1989 p 340 For Le Ciel the penultimate number of part IV Berlioz requests 4 or 5 instruments per part OCLC 9883790External links EditLa damnation de Faust Scores at the International Music Score Library Project in French Libretto On Berlioz s Damnation of Faust by Jacques Barzun Special Disc Jockey Pressing Recorded Autumn 1954 La damnation de Faust 22 Februar medici TV Orchestre National du Capitole Wiener Singverein Tugan Sokhiev Portal Opera Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title La damnation de Faust amp oldid 1137357940, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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