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Olivier Messiaen

Olivier Eugène Prosper Charles Messiaen (UK: /ˈmɛsiæ̃/,[1] US: /mɛˈsjæ̃, mˈsjæ̃, mɛˈsjɒ̃/;[2][3][4] French: [ɔlivje øʒɛn pʁɔspɛʁ ʃaʁl mɛsjɑ̃]; 10 December 1908 – 27 April 1992) was a French composer, organist, and ornithologist who was one of the major composers of the 20th century. His music is rhythmically complex; harmonically and melodically he employs a system he called modes of limited transposition, which he abstracted from the systems of material generated by his early compositions and improvisations. He wrote music for chamber ensembles and orchestra, vocal music, as well as for solo organ and piano, and also experimented with the use of novel electronic instruments developed in Europe during his lifetime.

Olivier Messiaen
Messiaen in 1986
Born(1908-12-10)10 December 1908
Avignon, France
Died27 April 1992(1992-04-27) (aged 83)
WorksList of compositions
Spouses

Messiaen entered the Paris Conservatoire at the age of 11 and studied with Paul Dukas, Maurice Emmanuel, Charles-Marie Widor and Marcel Dupré, among others. He was appointed organist at the Église de la Sainte-Trinité, Paris, in 1931, a post held for 61 years until his death. He taught at the Schola Cantorum de Paris during the 1930s. After the fall of France in 1940, Messiaen was interned for nine months in the German prisoner of war camp Stalag VIII-A, where he composed his Quatuor pour la fin du temps ("Quartet for the end of time") for the four instruments available in the prison—piano, violin, cello and clarinet. The piece was first performed by Messiaen and fellow prisoners for an audience of inmates and prison guards.[5] He was appointed professor of harmony soon after his release in 1941 and professor of composition in 1966 at the Paris Conservatoire, positions that he held until his retirement in 1978. His many distinguished pupils included Iannis Xenakis, George Benjamin, Alexander Goehr, Pierre Boulez, Tristan Murail, Karlheinz Stockhausen, and Yvonne Loriod, who became his second wife.

Messiaen perceived colours when he heard certain musical chords (a phenomenon known as chromesthesia); according to him, combinations of these colours were important in his compositional process. He travelled widely and wrote works inspired by diverse influences, including Japanese music, the landscape of Bryce Canyon in Utah, and the life of St. Francis of Assisi. For a short period Messiaen experimented with the parametrisation associated with "total serialism", in which field he is often cited as an innovator. His style absorbed many global musical influences such as Indonesian gamelan (tuned percussion often features prominently in his orchestral works).

He found birdsong fascinating, notating bird songs worldwide and incorporating birdsong transcriptions into his music. His innovative use of colour, his conception of the relationship between time and music, and his use of birdsong are among the features that make Messiaen's music distinctive.

Biography

Youth and studies

 
Messiaen with his mother and father in 1910

Olivier Eugène Prosper Charles Messiaen[6] was born on 10 December 1908 at 20 Boulevard Sixte-Isnard in Avignon, France, into a literary family.[7] He was the elder of two sons of Cécile Anne Marie Antoinette Sauvage [fr], a poet, and Pierre Léon Joseph Messiaen [fr], a scholar and teacher of English from a farm near Wervicq-Sud[8] who translated the plays of William Shakespeare into French.[9] Messiaen's mother published a sequence of poems, L'âme en bourgeon ("The Budding Soul"), the last chapter of Tandis que la terre tourne ("As the Earth Turns"), which address her unborn son. Messiaen later said this sequence of poems influenced him deeply and he cited it as prophetic of his future artistic career.[10] His brother Alain André Prosper Messiaen [fr], four years his junior, was also a poet.

At the outbreak of World War I, Pierre enlisted and Cécile took their two boys to live with her brother in Grenoble. There Messiaen became fascinated with drama, reciting Shakespeare to his brother with the help of a home-made toy theatre with translucent backdrops made from old cellophane wrappers.[11] At this time he also adopted the Roman Catholic faith. Later, Messiaen felt most at home in the Alps of the Dauphiné, where he had a house built south of Grenoble where he composed most of his music.[12]

He took piano lessons, having already taught himself to play. His interests included the recent music of French composers Claude Debussy and Maurice Ravel, and he asked for opera vocal scores for Christmas presents.[13] He also saved to buy scores and one such was Edvard Grieg's Peer Gynt whose "beautiful Norwegian melodic lines with the taste of folk song ... gave me a love of melody."[14] Around this time he began to compose. In 1918 his father returned from the war and the family moved to Nantes. He continued music lessons; one of his teachers, Jehan de Gibon, gifted him a score of Debussy's opera Pelléas et Mélisande, which Messiaen described as "a thunderbolt" and "probably the most decisive influence on me".[15] The following year Pierre Messiaen gained a teaching post at Sorbonne University in Paris. Messiaen entered the Paris Conservatoire in 1919, aged 11.[16]

 
Paul Dukas's composition class at the Paris Conservatoire, 1929. Messiaen sits at the far right; Dukas stands at the centre.

Messiaen made excellent academic progress at the Paris Conservatoire. In 1924, aged 15, he was awarded second prize in harmony, having been taught in that subject by professor Jean Gallon. In 1925, he won first prize in piano accompaniment, and in 1926 he gained first prize in fugue. After studying with Maurice Emmanuel, he was awarded second prize for the history of music in 1928.[17] Emmanuel's example engendered an interest in ancient Greek rhythms and exotic modes.[18] After showing improvisational skills on the piano Messiaen studied organ with Marcel Dupré.[19] Messiaen gained first prize in organ playing and improvisation in 1929.[18] After a year studying composition with Charles-Marie Widor, in autumn 1927 he entered the class of the newly appointed Paul Dukas. Messiaen's mother died of tuberculosis shortly before the class began.[20] Despite his grief, he resumed his studies, and in 1930 Messiaen won first prize in composition.[18]

While a student he composed his first published works—his eight Préludes for piano (the earlier Le banquet céleste was published subsequently). These exhibit Messiaen's use of his modes of limited transposition and palindromic rhythms (Messiaen called these non-retrogradable rhythms). His official début came in 1931 with his orchestral suite Les offrandes oubliées. That year he first heard a gamelan group, sparking his interest in the use of tuned percussion.[21]

La Trinité, La jeune France, and Messiaen's war

 
Église de la Sainte-Trinité, Paris, where Messiaen was titular organist for 61 years

In the autumn of 1927, Messiaen joined Dupré's organ course. Dupré later wrote that Messiaen, having never seen an organ console, sat quietly for an hour while Dupré explained and demonstrated the instrument, and then came back a week later to play Johann Sebastian Bach's Fantasia in C minor to an impressive standard.[22] From 1929, Messiaen regularly deputised at the Église de la Sainte-Trinité, Paris, for the ailing Charles Quef. The post became vacant in 1931 when Quef died, and Dupré, Charles Tournemire and Widor among others supported Messiaen's candidacy. His formal application included a letter of recommendation from Widor. The appointment was confirmed in 1931,[23] and he remained the organist at the church for more than 60 years.[24] He also assumed a post at the Schola Cantorum de Paris in the early 1930s.[25] In 1932, he composed the Apparition de l'église éternelle for organ.[26]

 
With Claire Delbos,

He also married the violinist and composer Claire Delbos (daughter of Victor Delbos) that year. Their marriage inspired him both to compose works for her to play (Thème et variations for violin and piano in the year they were married) and to write pieces to celebrate their domestic happiness, including the song cycle Poèmes pour Mi in 1936, which he orchestrated in 1937. Mi was Messiaen's affectionate nickname for his wife.[27] On 14 July 1937, the Messiaens' son, Pascal Emmanuel was born; Messiaen celebrated the occasion by writing Chants de Terre et de Ciel.[28] The marriage turned to tragedy when Delbos lost her memory after an operation towards the end of World War II. She spent the rest of her life in mental institutions.[29]

In 1934, Messiaen released his first major work for organ, La Nativité du Seigneur. He wrote a followup four years later titled Les Corps glorieux, however it was premièred in 1945.

In 1936, along with André Jolivet, Daniel-Lesur and Yves Baudrier, Messiaen formed the group La jeune France ("Young France"). Their manifesto implicitly attacked the frivolity predominant in contemporary Parisian music and rejected Jean Cocteau's 1918 Le coq et l'arlequin in favour of a "living music, having the impetus of sincerity, generosity and artistic conscientiousness".[30] Messiaen's career soon departed from this polemical phase.

In response to a commission for a piece to accompany light-and-water shows on the Seine during the Paris Exposition, in 1937 Messiaen demonstrated his interest in using the ondes Martenot, an electronic instrument, by composing Fêtes des belles eaux for an ensemble of six.[31] He included a part for the instrument in several of his subsequent compositions.[32]

 
Messiaen by Studio Harcourt (1937)

During this period he composed several multi-movement organ works. He arranged his orchestral suite L'ascension for organ, replacing the orchestral version's third movement with an entirely new movement, Transports de joie d'une âme devant la gloire du Christ qui est la sienne ("Ecstasies of a soul before the glory of Christ which is the soul's own") ( listen ).[33] He also wrote the extensive cycles La Nativité du Seigneur ("The Nativity of the Lord") and Les corps glorieux ("The glorious bodies").[34]

At the outbreak of World War II, Messiaen was drafted into the French army. Due to poor eyesight, he was enlisted as a medical auxiliary rather than an active combatant.[35] He was captured at Verdun, where he befriended clarinettist Henri Akoka; they were taken to Görlitz in May 1940, and imprisoned at Stalag VIII-A. He met a cellist (Étienne Pasquier) and a violinist (Jean le Boulaire [fr]) among his fellow prisoners. He wrote a trio for them, which he gradually incorporated into a more expansive new work, Quatuor pour la fin du temps ("Quartet for the End of Time").[5] With the help of a friendly German guard, Carl-Albert Brüll [de], he acquired manuscript paper and pencils.[36] The work was first performed in January 1941 to an audience of prisoners and prison guards, with the composer playing a poorly maintained upright piano in freezing conditions and the trio playing third-hand unkempt instruments.[37] The enforced introspection and reflection of camp life bore fruit in one of 20th-century classical music's acknowledged masterpieces. The title's "end of time" alludes to the Apocalypse, and also to the way that Messiaen, through rhythm and harmony, used time in a manner completely different from his predecessors and contemporaries.[38]

The idea of a European Centre of Education and Culture "Meeting Point Music Messiaen" on the site of Stalag VIII-A, for children and youth, artists, musicians and everyone in the region emerged in December 2004, was developed with the involvement of Messiaen's widow as a joint project between the council districts in Germany and Poland, and was finally completed in 2014.[39]

Tristan and serialism

Shortly after his release from Görlitz in May 1941 in large part due to the persuasions of his friend and teacher Marcel Dupré, Messiaen, who was now a household name, was appointed a professor of harmony at the Paris Conservatoire, where he taught until his retirement in 1978.[40] He compiled his Technique de mon langage musical ("Technique of my musical language") published in 1944, in which he quotes many examples from his music, particularly the Quartet.[41] Although only in his mid-thirties, his students described him as an outstanding teacher.[42] Among his early students were the composers Pierre Boulez and Karel Goeyvaerts. Other pupils included Karlheinz Stockhausen in 1952, Alexander Goehr in 1956–57, Tristan Murail in 1967–72 and George Benjamin during the late 1970s.[43] The Greek composer Iannis Xenakis was referred to him in 1951; Messiaen urged Xenakis to take advantage of his background in mathematics and architecture in his music.[44]

In 1943, Messiaen wrote Visions de l'Amen ("Visions of the Amen") for two pianos for Yvonne Loriod and himself to perform. Shortly thereafter he composed the enormous solo piano cycle Vingt regards sur l'enfant-Jésus ("Twenty gazes upon the child Jesus") for her.[45] Again for Loriod, he wrote Trois petites liturgies de la présence divine ("Three small liturgies of the Divine Presence") for female chorus and orchestra, which includes a difficult solo piano part.[46]

Two years after Visions de l'Amen, Messiaen composed the song cycle Harawi, the first of three works inspired by the legend of Tristan and Isolde. The second of these works about human (as opposed to divine) love was the result of a commission from Serge Koussevitzky. Messiaen stated that the commission did not specify the length of the work or the size of the orchestra. This was the ten-movement Turangalîla-Symphonie. It is not a conventional symphony, but rather an extended meditation on the joy of human union and love. It does not contain the sexual guilt inherent in Richard Wagner's Tristan und Isolde because Messiaen believed that sexual love is a divine gift.[35] The third piece inspired by the Tristan myth was Cinq rechants for twelve unaccompanied singers, described by Messiaen as influenced by the alba of the troubadours.[47] Messiaen visited the United States in 1949, where his music was conducted by Koussevitsky and Leopold Stokowski. His Turangalîla-Symphonie was first performed in the US the same year, conducted by Leonard Bernstein.[48]

Messiaen taught an analysis class at the Paris Conservatoire. In 1947 he taught (and performed with Loriod) for two weeks in Budapest.[49] In 1949 he taught at Tanglewood[50] and presented his work at the Darmstadt new music summer school.[51] While he did not employ the twelve-tone technique, after three years teaching analysis of twelve-tone scores, including works by Arnold Schoenberg, he experimented with ways of making scales of other elements (including duration, articulation and dynamics) analogous to the chromatic pitch scale. The results of these innovations was the "Mode de valeurs et d'intensités" for piano (from the Quatre études de rythme)[52] which has been misleadingly described as the first work of "total serialism". It had a large influence on the earliest European serial composers, including Pierre Boulez and Karlheinz Stockhausen.[53] During this period he also experimented with musique concrète, music for recorded sounds.[54]

Birdsong and the 1960s

When in 1952 Messiaen was asked to provide a test piece for flautists at the Paris Conservatoire, he composed the piece Le Merle noir for flute and piano. While he had long been fascinated by birdsong, and birds had made appearances in several of his earlier works (for example La Nativité, Quatuor and Vingt regards), the flute piece was based entirely on the song of the blackbird.[55]

He took this development to a new level with his 1953 orchestral work Réveil des oiseaux—its material consists almost entirely of the birdsong one might hear between midnight and noon in the Jura.[56] From this period onwards, Messiaen incorporated birdsong into his compositions and composed several works for which birds provide both the title and subject matter (for example the collection of thirteen pieces for piano Catalogue d'oiseaux completed in 1958, and La fauvette des jardins of 1971).[57] Paul Griffiths observed that Messiaen was a more conscientious ornithologist than any previous composer, and a more musical observer of birdsong than any previous ornithologist.[58]

 
Yvonne Loriod teaching piano (1982)

Messiaen's first wife died in 1959 after a long illness, and in 1961 he married Loriod.[59] He began to travel widely, to attend musical events and to seek out and transcribe the songs of more exotic birds in the wild. Despite this, he only spoke French. Loriod frequently assisted her husband's detailed studies of birdsong while walking with him, by making tape recordings for later reference.[60] In 1962 he visited Japan, where Gagaku music and Noh theatre inspired the orchestral "Japanese sketches", Sept haïkaï, which contain stylised imitations of traditional Japanese instruments.[61]

Messiaen's music was by this time championed by, among others, Pierre Boulez, who programmed first performances at his Domaine musical concerts and the Donaueschingen festival.[62] Works performed included Réveil des oiseaux, Chronochromie (commissioned for the 1960 festival) and Couleurs de la cité céleste. The latter piece was the result of a commission for a composition for three trombones and three xylophones; Messiaen added to this more brass, wind, percussion and piano, and specified a xylophone, xylorimba and marimba rather than three xylophones.[63] Another work of this period, Et exspecto resurrectionem mortuorum, was commissioned as a commemoration of the dead of the two World Wars and was performed first semi-privately in the Sainte-Chapelle, then publicly in Chartres Cathedral with Charles de Gaulle in the audience.[64]

His reputation as a composer continued to grow and in 1959, he was nominated as an Officier of the Légion d'honneur.[65] In 1966, he was officially appointed professor of composition at the Paris Conservatoire, although he had in effect been teaching composition for years.[66] Further honours included election to the Institut de France in 1967 and the Académie des beaux-arts in 1968, the Erasmus Prize in 1971, the award of the Royal Philharmonic Society Gold Medal and the Ernst von Siemens Music Prize in 1975, the Sonning Award (Denmark's highest musical honour) in 1977, the Wolf Prize in Arts in 1982, and the presentation of the Croix de Commander of the Belgian Order of the Crown in 1980.[67]

Transfiguration, Canyons, St. Francis, and the Beyond

Messiaen's next work was the large-scale La Transfiguration de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ. The composition occupied him from 1965 to 1969 and the musicians employed include a 100-voice ten-part choir, seven solo instruments and large orchestra. Its fourteen movements are a meditation on the story of Christ's Transfiguration.[68] Shortly after its completion, Messiaen received a commission from Alice Tully for a work to celebrate the U.S. bicentennial. He arranged a visit to the US in spring 1972, and was inspired by Bryce Canyon in Utah, where he observed the canyon's distinctive colours and birdsong.[69] The twelve-movement orchestral piece Des canyons aux étoiles... was the result, first performed in 1974 in New York.[70]

 
An ondes Martenot, an electronic instrument, for which Messiaen included a part in several of his compositions: the orchestra for his opera Saint François d'Assise includes three of them

In 1971, he was asked to compose a piece for the Paris Opéra. While reluctant to undertake such a major project, he was persuaded by French president Georges Pompidou to accept the commission and began work on his Saint-François d'Assise in 1975 after two years of preparation. The composition was intensive (he also wrote his own libretto) and occupied him from 1975 to 1979; the orchestration was carried out from 1979 until 1983.[71] Messiaen preferred to describe the final work as a "spectacle" rather than an opera. It was first performed in 1983. Some commentators at the time thought that the opera would be his valediction (at times Messiaen himself believed so),[72] but he continued to compose. In 1984, he published a major collection of organ pieces, Livre du Saint Sacrement; other works include birdsong pieces for solo piano, and works for piano with orchestra.[73]

In the summer of 1978, Messiaen was forced to retire from teaching at the Paris Conservatoire due to French law. He was promoted to the highest rank of the Légion d'honneur, the Grand-Croix, in 1987, and was awarded the decoration in London by his old friend, Jean Langlais.[74] An operation prevented his participation in the celebration of his 70th birthday in 1978,[75] but in 1988 tributes for Messiaen's 80th included a complete performance in London's Royal Festival Hall of St. François, which the composer attended,[76] and Erato's publication of a seventeen-CD collection of Messiaen's music including a disc of the composer in conversation with Claude Samuel.[77]

Although in considerable pain near the end of his life (requiring repeated surgery on his back)[78] he was able to fulfil a commission from the New York Philharmonic Orchestra, Éclairs sur l'au-delà..., which was premièred six months after his death. He died in the Beaujon Hospital in Clichy on 27 April 1992, aged 83.[79]

On going through his papers, Loriod discovered that, in the last months of his life, he had been composing a concerto for four musicians he felt particularly grateful to, namely herself, the cellist Mstislav Rostropovich, the oboist Heinz Holliger and the flautist Catherine Cantin[80] (hence the title Concert à quatre). Four of the five intended movements were substantially complete; Yvonne Loriod undertook the orchestration of the second half of the first movement and of the whole of the fourth with advice from George Benjamin. It was premiered by the dedicatees in September 1994.[81]

Music

 
Example 1. A page from Oiseaux exotiques. It illustrates Messiaen's use of ancient and exotic rhythms (in the percussion near the bottom of the score "Asclepiad" and "Sapphic" are ancient Greek rhythms, and Nibçankalîla is a decî-tâla from Śārṅgadeva). It also illustrates Messiaen's precision in notating birdsong: the birds identified here are the white-crested laughing thrush (garralaxe à huppe blanche) in the brass and wind instruments, and the orchard oriole (troupiale des vergers) played on the xylophone.

Messiaen's music has been described as outside the western musical tradition, although growing out of that tradition and being influenced by it.[82] Much of his output denies the western conventions of forward motion, development and diatonic harmonic resolution. This is partly due to the symmetries of his technique—for instance the modes of limited transposition do not admit the conventional cadences found in western classical music.[83]

His youthful love for the fairy-tale element in Shakespeare prefigured his later expressions of Catholic liturgy.[84] Messiaen was not interested in depicting aspects of theology such as sin;[85] rather he concentrated on the theology of joy, divine love and redemption.[86]

Messiaen continually evolved new composition techniques, always integrating them into his existing musical style; his final works still retain the use of modes of limited transposition.[83] For many commentators this continual development made every major work from the Quatuor onwards a conscious summation of all that Messiaen had composed up to that time. However, very few of these major works lack new technical ideas—simple examples being the introduction of communicable language in Meditations, the invention of a new percussion instrument (the geophone) for Des canyons aux etoiles..., and the freedom from any synchronisation with the main pulse of individual parts in certain birdsong episodes of St. François d'Assise.[87]

As well as discovering new techniques, Messiaen studied and absorbed foreign music, including Ancient Greek rhythms,[18] Hindu rhythms (he encountered Śārṅgadeva's list of 120 rhythmic units, the deçî-tâlas),[88] Balinese and Javanese Gamelan, birdsong, and Japanese music (see Example 1 for an instance of his use of ancient Greek and Hindu rhythms).[89]

While he was instrumental in the academic exploration of his techniques (he compiled two treatises: the later one in five volumes was substantially complete when he died and was published posthumously), and was himself a master of music analysis, he considered the development and study of techniques a means to intellectual, aesthetic, and emotional ends. Thus Messiaen maintained that a musical composition must be measured against three separate criteria: it must be interesting, beautiful to listen to, and it must touch the listener.[90]

Messiaen wrote a large body of music for the piano. Although a considerable pianist himself, he was undoubtedly assisted by Yvonne Loriod's formidable piano technique and ability to convey complex rhythms and rhythmic combinations; in his piano writing from Visions de l'Amen onwards he had her in mind. Messiaen said, "I am able to allow myself the greatest eccentricities because to her anything is possible."[91]

Western influences

Developments in modern French music were a major influence on Messiaen, particularly the music of Claude Debussy and his use of the whole-tone scale (which Messiaen called Mode 1 in his modes of limited transposition). Messiaen rarely used the whole-tone scale in his compositions because, he said, after Debussy and Dukas there was "nothing to add",[92] but the modes he did use are similarly symmetrical.

Messiaen had a great admiration for the music of Igor Stravinsky, particularly the use of rhythm in earlier works such as The Rite of Spring, and his use of orchestral colour. He was further influenced by the orchestral brilliance of Heitor Villa-Lobos, who lived in Paris in the 1920s and gave acclaimed concerts there. Among composers for the keyboard, Messiaen singled out Jean-Philippe Rameau, Domenico Scarlatti, Frédéric Chopin, Debussy and Isaac Albéniz.[91] He loved the music of Modest Mussorgsky and incorporated varied modifications of what he called the "M-shaped" melodic motif from Mussorgsky's Boris Godunov,[92] although he modified the final interval in this motif from a perfect fourth to a tritone (Example 3).[93]

Messiaen was further influenced by Surrealism, as may be seen from the titles of some of the piano Préludes (Un reflet dans le vent..., "A reflection in the wind")[94] and in some of the imagery of his poetry (he published poems as prefaces to certain works, for example Les offrandes oubliées).[95]

Colour

Colour lies at the heart of Messiaen's music. He believed that terms such as "tonal", "modal" and "serial" are misleading analytical conveniences.[96] For him there were no modal, tonal or serial compositions, only music with or without colour.[97] He said that Claudio Monteverdi, Mozart, Chopin, Richard Wagner, Mussorgsky and Stravinsky all wrote strongly coloured music.[98]

In some of Messiaen's scores, he notated the colours in the music (notably in Couleurs de la cité céleste and Des canyons aux étoiles...)—the purpose being to aid the conductor in interpretation rather than to specify which colours the listener should experience. The importance of colour is linked to Messiaen's synaesthesia, which caused him to experience colours when he heard or imagined music (his form of synaesthesia, the most common form, involved experiencing the associated colours in a non-visual form rather than perceiving them visually). In his multi-volume music theory treatise Traité de rythme, de couleur, et d'ornithologie ("Treatise of Rhythm, Colour and Birdsong"), Messiaen wrote descriptions of the colours of certain chords. His descriptions range from the simple ("gold and brown") to the highly detailed ("blue-violet rocks, speckled with little grey cubes, cobalt blue, deep Prussian blue, highlighted by a bit of violet-purple, gold, red, ruby, and stars of mauve, black and white. Blue-violet is dominant").[99][100]

When asked what Messiaen's main influence had been on composers, George Benjamin said, "I think the sheer ... colour has been so influential, ... rather than being a decorative element, [Messiaen showed that colour] could be a structural, a fundamental element, ... the fundamental material of the music itself."[101]

Symmetry

Many of Messiaen's composition techniques made use of symmetries of time and pitch.[102]

Time

 
Example 2. The first bar of the piano Prélude, Instants défunts. An early example of Messiaen's use of palindromic rhythms (which he called non-retrogradable rhythms).

From his earliest works, Messiaen used non-retrogradable (palindromic) rhythms (Example 2). He sometimes combined rhythms with harmonic sequences in such a way that, if the process were repeated indefinitely, the music would eventually run through all possible permutations and return to its starting point. For Messiaen, this represented the "charm of impossibilities" of these processes. He only ever presented a portion of any such process, as if allowing the informed listener a glimpse of something eternal. In the first movement of Quatuor pour la fin du temps the piano and cello together provide an early example.[103]

Pitch

Messiaen used modes he called modes of limited transposition.[83] They are distinguished as groups of notes that can only be transposed by a semitone a limited number of times. For example, the whole-tone scale (Messiaen's Mode 1) only exists in two transpositions: namely C–D–E–F–G–A and D–E–F–G–A–B. Messiaen abstracted these modes from the harmony of his improvisations and early works.[104] Music written using the modes avoids conventional diatonic harmonic progressions, since for example Messiaen's Mode 2 (identical to the octatonic scale used also by other composers) permits precisely the dominant seventh chords whose tonic the mode does not contain.[105]

Time and rhythm

 
Example 3. An excerpt from Danse de la fureur, pour les sept trompettes from Quatuor pour la fin du temps. It illustrates Messiaen's use of additive rhythms—in this example the addition of unpaired semiquavers (sixteenth notes) to an underlying quaver (eighth note) pulse and the lengthening of the final quaver by addition of a dot. It illustrates the use of what Messiaen called the Boris M-shaped motif (the last five notes of the excerpt).

As well as making use of non-retrogradable rhythm and the Hindu decî-tâlas, Messiaen also composed with "additive" rhythms. This involves lengthening individual notes slightly or interpolating a short note into an otherwise regular rhythm (see Example 3), or shortening or lengthening every note of a rhythm by the same duration (adding a semiquaver to every note in a rhythm on its repeat, for example).[106] This led Messiaen to use rhythmic cells that irregularly alternate between two and three units, a process that also occurs in Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring, which Messiaen admired.[107]

A factor that contributes to Messiaen's suspension of the conventional perception of time in his music is the extremely slow tempos he often specifies (the fifth movement Louange à l'eternité de Jésus of Quatuor is actually given the tempo marking infiniment lent).[108] Messiaen also used the concept of "chromatic durations", for example in his Soixante-quatre durées from Livre d'orgue ( listen ), which is built from, in Messiaen's words, "64 chromatic durations from 1 to 64 demisemiquavers [thirty-second notes]—invested in groups of 4, from the ends to the centre, forwards and backwards alternately—treated as a retrograde canon. The whole peopled with birdsong."[109]

Harmony

 
Example 4. The song of the golden oriole from Le loriot, part of Catalogue d'oiseaux. The birdsong played by the pianist's left hand (notated on the lower staff) provides the fundamental notes, and the quieter harmonies played by the right hand (on the upper staff) alter their timbre.

In addition to making harmonic use of the modes of limited transposition, he cited the harmonic series as a physical phenomenon that provides chords with a context he felt was missing in purely serial music.[110] An example of Messiaen's harmonic use of this phenomenon, which he called "resonance", is the last two bars of his first piano Prélude, La colombe ("The dove"): the chord is built from harmonics of the fundamental base note E.[111]

Related to this use of resonance, Messiaen also composed music in which the lowest, or fundamental, note is combined with higher notes or chords played much more quietly. These higher notes, far from being perceived as conventional harmony, function as harmonics that alter the timbre of the fundamental note like mixture stops on a pipe organ.[112] An example is the song of the golden oriole in Le loriot of the Catalogue d'oiseaux for solo piano (Example 4).

In his use of conventional diatonic chords, Messiaen often transcended their historically mundane connotations (for example, his frequent use of the added sixth chord as a resolution).[113]

Birdsong

 
The garden warbler provided the title and much of the material for Messiaen's La fauvette des jardins.

Birdsong fascinated Messiaen from an early age, and in this he found encouragement from his teacher Dukas, who reportedly urged his pupils to "listen to the birds". Messiaen included stylised birdsong in some of his early compositions (including L'abîme d'oiseaux from the Quatuor pour la fin du temps), integrating it into his sound-world by techniques like the modes of limited transposition and chord colouration. His evocations of birdsong became increasingly sophisticated, and with Le réveil des oiseaux this process reached maturity, the whole piece being built from birdsong: in effect it is a dawn chorus for orchestra. The same can be said for "Epode", the five-minute sixth movement of Chronochromie, which is scored for eighteen violins, each one playing a different birdsong. Messiaen notated the bird species with the music in the score (examples 1 and 4). The pieces are not simple transcriptions; even the works with purely bird-inspired titles, such as Catalogue d'oiseaux and Fauvette des jardins, are tone poems evoking the landscape, its colours and atmosphere.[114]

Serialism

For a few compositions, Messiaen created scales for duration, attack and timbre analogous to the chromatic pitch scale. He expressed annoyance at the historical importance given to one of these works, Mode de valeurs et d'intensités, by musicologists intent on crediting him with the invention of "total serialism".[90]

Messiaen later introduced what he called a "communicable language", a "musical alphabet" to encode sentences. He first used this technique in his Méditations sur le Mystère de la Sainte Trinité for organ; where the "alphabet" includes motifs for the concepts to have, to be and God, while the sentences encoded feature sections from the writings of St. Thomas Aquinas.[115]

Writings

  • Messiaen, Olivier (1933). Vingt leçons de solfège modernes. Paris: Editions H. Lemoine. OCLC 1080796385.
  • —— (1936). "Ariane et Barbe-Bleue de Paul Dukas". La Revue musicale. No. 116. pp. 79–86.
  • —— (31 March 1938). "Les sept chorals-poèmes pour les sept paroles du Christ en croix". Le monde musical [es]. No. 3. p. 34.
  • —— (May 1938). "L'orgue mystique de Tournemire". Syrinx. pp. 26–27.
  • —— (1939). "Le rythme chez Igor Strawinsky". La Revue musicale. No. 191. pp. 91–92.
  • —— (1939). Vingt leçons d'harmonie. Paris: Alphonse Leduc. OCLC 843636910.
  • —— (1944). Technique de mon langage musical. Paris: Alphonse Leduc. OCLC 690654311.[116]
  • —— (1946). Preface. Mana: Six pièces pour piano. By Jolivet, André. Paris: Costallat. OCLC 884442941.
  • —— (1947). "Maurice Emmanuel: ses "Trente chansons bourguignonnes"". La Revue musicale. No. 206. pp. 107–108.
  • —— (1958). "Musikalisches Glaubens-bekenntnis'". Melos. No. 25/12. pp. 381–385.
  • —— (1960). Conférence de Bruxelles. Paris: Alphonse Leduc. OCLC 855187. Essentially a republishing of Messiaen 1958.
  • —— (1970). Preface. La prophétie musicale dans l'histoire de l'humanité précédée d'une étude sur les nombres et les planètes dans leur rapports avec la musique. By Roustit, Albert. Roanne: Horvath.
  • —— (1978). Conférence de Notre Dame. Paris: Alphonse Leduc. OCLC 4354577.
  • —— (1986). Messiaen on Messiaen: The Composer Writes about His Works. Bloomington: Frangipani Press. OCLC 911921727.
  • —— (1987). Les 22 concertos pour piano de Mozart. Paris: Librairie Séguier. OCLC 928373831.
  • —— (1988). Conférence de Kyoto. Introduction and Japanese translation by Naoko Tamamura. Paris: Alphonse Leduc. OCLC 22921969.
  • —— (1991). Preface. Tandis que la terre tourne. By ——. Paris: Librairie Séguier. OCLC 463610307.
  • —— (1994–2002). Traité de rythme, de couleur, et d'ornithologie (7 volumes). Paris: Alphonse Leduc. OCLC 931220676.
  • ——; Loriod, Yvonne. Analyses des oeuvres pour piano de Maurice Ravel. Paris: Éditions Durand. OCLC 995326437.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Messiaen, Olivier". Lexico UK English Dictionary. Oxford University Press.[dead link]
  2. ^ "Messiaen". The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (5th ed.). HarperCollins. Retrieved 18 August 2019.
  3. ^ "Messiaen". Collins English Dictionary. HarperCollins. Retrieved 18 August 2019.
  4. ^ "Messiaen". Merriam-Webster Dictionary. Retrieved 18 August 2019.
  5. ^ a b Brown, Kellie D. (2020). The sound of hope: Music as solace, resistance and salvation during the holocaust and world war II. McFarland. pp. 168–175. ISBN 978-1-4766-7056-0.
  6. ^ Avignon Civil Records. "Olivier Eugène Prosper Charles Messiaen's birth certificate" (PDF).
  7. ^ Dingle (2007), p. 3
  8. ^ Visions of Amen: The Early Life and Music of Olivier Messiaen, Stephen Schloesser
  9. ^ Hill & Simeone (2005), pp. 10–14
  10. ^ Messiaen & Samuel (1994), p. 15
  11. ^ Messiaen & Samuel (1994), p. 41
  12. ^ Hill (1995), pp. 300–301
  13. ^ Messiaen & Samuel (1994), p. 109
  14. ^ Christopher Dingle, The Life of Messiaen (London: Cambridge University Press, 2007), 7.
  15. ^ Messiaen & Samuel (1994), p. 110
  16. ^ Hill & Simeone (2005), p. 16
  17. ^ Hill & Simeone (2005), pp. 16–17
  18. ^ a b c d Sherlaw Johnson (1975), p. 10
  19. ^ Bannister (2013), p. 171
  20. ^ Hill & Simeone (2005), p. 20
  21. ^ For further discussion of Messiaen's youth, see, generally, Hill & Simeone (2005)
  22. ^ Hill & Simeone (2005), p. 22
  23. ^ Hill & Simeone (2005), pp. 34–37
  24. ^ Heller (2010), p. 68
  25. ^ Dingle (2007), p. 45
  26. ^ Gillock (2009), p. 32
  27. ^ Sherlaw Johnson (1975), pp. 56–57
  28. ^ Gillock (2009), p. 381
  29. ^ Yvonne Loriod, in Hill (1995), p. 294
  30. ^ From the programme for the opening concert of La jeune France, quoted in Griffiths (1985), p. 72
  31. ^ Hill & Simeone (2005), pp. 73–75
  32. ^ Dingle (2013), p. 34
  33. ^ Benitez (2008), p. 288
  34. ^ Hill & Simeone (2005), p. 115
  35. ^ a b Griffiths (1985), p. 139
  36. ^ Ross, Alex (22 March 2004). "The Rest Is Noise: Messiaen's Quartet for the End of Time". The New Yorker. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
  37. ^ Rischin (2003), p. 5
  38. ^ See extended discussion in Griffiths (1985), Chapter 6: A Technique for the End of Time, particularly pp. 104–106
  39. ^ "European Center Memory, Education, Culture". Meetingpoint Music Messiaen e.V. 17 April 2020. Retrieved 27 May 2020.
  40. ^ Benitez (2008), p. 155
  41. ^ Benitez (2008), p. 33
  42. ^ Pierre Boulez in Hill (1995), pp. 266ff
  43. ^ Benitez (2008), p. xiii
  44. ^ Matossian (1986), p. 48
  45. ^ Sherlaw Johnson (1975), pp. 11, 64
  46. ^ Hill & Simeone (2007), p. 21
  47. ^ Griffiths (1985), p. 142
  48. ^ Hill & Simeone (2005), pp. 186–192
  49. ^ Benitez (2008), p. 3
  50. ^ Hill & Simeone (2005), p. 415
  51. ^ Iddon (2013), p. 31
  52. ^ Sherlaw Johnson (1975), p. 104
  53. ^ Sherlaw Johnson (1975), pp. 192–194
  54. ^ Hill & Simeone (2005), p. 198
  55. ^ Dingle (2007), p. 139. For a general discussion of Messiaen's fusion of birdsong and music, see Hill & Simeone (2007)
  56. ^ Hill & Simeone (2007), p. 27
  57. ^ Kraft (2013)
  58. ^ Griffiths (1985), p. 168; see also Kraft (2013)
  59. ^ Benitez (2008), p. 4
  60. ^ Benitez (2008), p. 138
  61. ^ Messiaen's visit to Japan is documented in Hill & Simeone (2005), pp. 245–251, and there is a more technical discussion in Griffiths (1985), pp. 197–200. Malcolm Troup, writing in Hill (1995), additionally notes the direct influence of Noh theatre on aspects of Messiaen's opera St François d'Assise.
  62. ^ Benitez (2008), p. 280
  63. ^ Sherlaw Johnson (1975), p. 166
  64. ^ Simeone (2009), pp. 185–195
  65. ^ Hill & Simeone (2005), p. 245
  66. ^ Hill & Simeone (2005), p. 306
  67. ^ Hill & Simeone (2005), p. 333
  68. ^ Bruhn (2008a), pp. 57–96
  69. ^ Griffiths (1985), p. 225
  70. ^ Hill & Simeone (2005), p. 301
  71. ^ Programme for Opéra de la Bastille production of St. François d'Assise, p. 18
  72. ^ The composer in conversation with Jean-Cristophe Marti in 1992, see p. 29 of booklet accompanying the recording of Saint-François d'Assise conducted by Kent Nagano on Deutsche Grammophon/PolyGram 445 176; see also Hill & Simeone (2005), pp. 340 and 342
  73. ^ Dingle (2013)
  74. ^ Hill & Simeone (2005), p. 357
  75. ^ Dingle (2007), p. 207
  76. ^ Hill & Simeone (2005), p. 371
  77. ^ . ArkivMusic. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 8 September 2013.
  78. ^ Yvonne Loriod, in Hill (1995), p. 302
  79. ^ Gillock (2009), p. 383
  80. ^ "Catherine Cantin, Flutist - MusicalWorld.com". musicalworld.com.
  81. ^ Dingle (2013), pp. 293–310
  82. ^ Griffiths (1985), p. 15
  83. ^ a b c Griffiths (1985), Introduction
  84. ^ "Olivier Messiaen". Schott Music. Archived from the original on 8 September 2013. Retrieved 8 September 2013.
  85. ^ Messiaen & Samuel (1994), p. 213
  86. ^ Bruhn, Siglind; Deely, John (January 1996). "Religious Symbolism in the Music of Olivier Messiaen". The American Journal of Semiotics. 13 (1): 277–309. doi:10.5840/ajs1996131/412.
  87. ^ See for instance Griffiths (1985), p. 233, "[Des canyons aux étoiles...] is therefore not so much a synthesis, as has sometimes been suggested, but more a step into the future that also joins the circle with the composer's past."
  88. ^ Messiaen & Samuel (1994), p. 77
  89. ^ Coleman, John (24 November 2008). "Maestro of Joy". America: the National Catholic Review. Retrieved 8 September 2013.
  90. ^ a b Messiaen & Samuel (1994), p. 47
  91. ^ a b Messiaen & Samuel (1994), p. 114
  92. ^ a b Messiaen, Technique de mon langage musical
  93. ^ Bruhn (2008a), p. 46
  94. ^ Sherlaw Johnson (1975), p. 26
  95. ^ Sherlaw Johnson (1975), p. 76
  96. ^ Messiaen & Samuel (1994), pp. 49–50
  97. ^ Messiaen & Samuel (1994), p. 63
  98. ^ Messiaen & Samuel (1994), p. 62
  99. ^ See Messiaen, Olivier Traité de rythme, de couleur, et d'ornithologie. See also Bernard, Jonathan W. (1986). "Messiaen's Synaesthesia: The Correspondence between Color and Sound Structure in His Music." Music Perception 4: 41–68..
  100. ^ Fink, Monika (2003). "Farb-Klänge und Klang-Farben im Werk von Olivier Messiaen". Music in Art: International Journal for Music Iconography. 28 (1–2): 163–172. ISSN 1522-7464.
  101. ^ George Benjamin, speaking in interview with Tommy Pearson, broadcast on BBC4 in the interval of Prom concert in 2004 at which Benjamin conducted a performance of Des canyons aux étoiles... Asked what made Messiaen so influential he said, "I think the sheer—the word he loved—colour has been so influential. People, composers, have found that colour, rather than being a decorative element, could be a structural, a fundamental element. And not colour just in a surface way, not just in the way you orchestrate it—no—the fundamental material of the music itself. More than that I can't say except that for my own small world he was incredibly important, and an exceptionally special and indeed wonderful person. I met him when I was very young (I was 16) and stayed closely in touch with him until he died in 1992, and was immensely fond of him..."
  102. ^ Benitez, Vincent (July 2009). "Reconsidering Messiaen as Serialist". Music Analysis. 28 (2–3): 267–299. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2249.2011.00293.x.
  103. ^ For discussion, see for example Iain G. Matheson's article "The End of Time" in Hill (1995), particularly pp. 237–243
  104. ^ Hill (1995), p. 17
  105. ^ Griffiths (1985), p. 32
  106. ^ Bruhn (2008a), pp. 37–49
  107. ^ Dingle & Simeone (2007), p. 48
  108. ^ Pople (1998), p. 82
  109. ^ Quoted by Gillian Weir, who discusses the work in Hill (1995) pp. 364–366
  110. ^ Messiaen & Samuel (1994), pp. 241–242
  111. ^ Griffiths (1985) p. 34
  112. ^ Benitez, Vincent (April 2004). "Aspects of Harmony in Messiaen's Later Music: An Examination of the Chords of Transposed Inversions on the Same Bass Note". Journal of Musicological Research. 23 (2): 187–226. doi:10.1080/01411890490449781. S2CID 191492252.
  113. ^ Bruhn, Siglind (2008). "Traces of a Thomistic De musica in the Compositions of Olivier Messiaen". Logos. 11 (4): 16–56. doi:10.1353/log.0.0015. S2CID 51268362.
  114. ^ For extensive discussion of the use of birdsong in Messiaen's work, see Kraft (2013).
  115. ^ See, for example, Richard Steinitz in Hill (1995), pp. 466–469
  116. ^ Broad, Stephen. "Technique de mon langage musical." The Routledge Encyclopedia of Modernism. : Taylor and Francis, 2016. Date Accessed 1 December 2021 https://www.rem.routledge.com/articles/technique-de-mon-langage-musical. doi:10.4324/9781135000356-REM601-1

References

  • Bannister, Peter (2013). "Olivier Messiaen (1908–1992)". In Anderson, Christopher S (ed.). Twentieth-century organ music. New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-136-49790-2.
  • Benitez, Vincent P. (2008). Olivier Messiaen: A Research and Information Guide. New York and London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-97372-4.
  • Benitez, Vincent P. (2018). Olivier Messiaen: A Research and Information Guide, 2nd ed. New York and London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-367-87354-7.
  • Bruhn, Siglind (2007). Messiaen's Contemplations of Covenant and Incarnation: Musical Symbols of Faith in the Two Great Piano Cycles of the 1940s. Hillsdale, NY: Pendragon Press. ISBN 978-1-57647-129-6.
  • Bruhn, Siglind (2008a). Messiaen's Interpretations of Holiness and Trinity. Echoes of Medieval Theology in the Oratorio, Organ Meditations, and Opera. Hillsdale, NY: Pendragon Press. ISBN 978-1-57647-139-5.
  • Bruhn, Siglind (2008b). Messiaen's Explorations of Love and Death. Musico-poetic Signification in the Tristan Trilogy and Three Related Song Cycles. Hillsdale, NY: Pendragon Press. ISBN 978-1-57647-136-4.
  • Dingle, Christopher (2007). The Life of Messiaen. Cambridge & New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-63547-9.
  • Dingle, Christopher (2013). Messiaen's final works. Burlington, VT: Ashgate. ISBN 978-0-7546-0633-8.
  • Dingle, Christopher; Simeone, Nigel, eds. (2007). Olivier Messiaen: Music, Art and Literature. Aldershot: Ashgate. ISBN 978-0-7546-5297-7.
  • Gillock, Jon (2009). Performing Messiaen's Organ Music: 66 Masterclasses. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-35373-3.
  • Griffiths, Paul (1985). Olivier Messiaen and the Music of Time. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-1813-6.
  • Griffiths, Paul (2001). "Messiaen, Olivier (Eugène Prosper Charles)". In Sadie, Stanley; Tyrrell, John (eds.). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. Oxford Music Online (second ed.). London: Macmillan Publishers. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.18497.
  • Griffiths, Paul; Nichols, Roger (2002). "Messiaen, Olivier (Eugène Prosper Charles)". In Latham (ed.). The Oxford Companion to Music (new ed.). Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-866212-9.
  • Heller, Karin (2010). "Olivier Messiaen and Cardinal Jean-Marie Lustiger". In Shenton, Andrew (ed.). Messiaen the theologian. Farnham: Ashgate. ISBN 978-0-7546-6640-0.
  • Hill, Peter, ed. (1995). The Messiaen Companion. London: Faber and Faber. ISBN 978-0-571-17033-3.
  • Hill, Peter; Simeone, Nigel (2005). Messiaen. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-10907-8.
  • Hill, Peter; Simeone, Nigel, eds. (2007). Olivier Messiaen: Oiseaux exotiques. Aldershot: Ashgate. ISBN 978-0-7546-5630-2.
  • Iddon, Martin (2013). New Music at Darmstadt: Nono, Stockhausen, Cage, and Boulez. Music since 1900. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-03329-0.
  • Kraft, David (2013). Birdsong in the Music of Olivier Messiaen. London: Arosa Press. ISBN 978-1-4775-1779-6.
  • Matossian, Nouritza (1986). Xenakis. London: Kahn and Averill. ISBN 978-1-871082-17-3.
  • Pople, Anthony (1998). Messiaen: Quatuor pour la fin du temps. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-58538-5.
  • Rischin, Rebecca (2003). For the End of Time: The Story of the Messiaen Quartet. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-4136-3.
  • Samuel, Claude (tr. E. Thomas Glasow) (1994). Olivier Messiaen: Music and Color: Conversations with Claude Samuel. Portland, Oregon: Amadeus Press. ISBN 978-0-931340-67-3.
  • Shenton, Andrew (2008). Olivier Messiaen's System of Signs: Notes towards Understanding his Music. Aldershot: Ashgate. ISBN 978-0-7546-6168-9.
  • Shenton, Andrew (2010). Messiaen the Theologian. Aldershot: Ashgate. ISBN 978-0-7546-6640-0.
  • Sherlaw Johnson, Robert (1975). Messiaen. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-02812-8.
  • Simeone, Nigel (2009). "'Un oeuvre simple, solennelle...'". In Shenton, Andrew (ed.). Messiaen the theologian. Farnham: Ashgate. ISBN 978-0-7546-6640-0.

Further reading

  • Baggech, Melody Ann (1998). An English Translation of Olivier Messiaen's "Traite de Rythme, de Couleur, et d'Ornithologie" Norman: The University of Oklahoma.
  • Barker, Thomas (2012). "The Social and Aesthetic Situation of Olivier Messiaen's Religious Music: Turangalîla Symphonie." International Review of the Aesthetics and Sociology of Music 43/1:53–70.
  • Benitez, Vincent P. (2000). "A Creative Legacy: Messiaen as Teacher of Analysis." College Music Symposium 40: 117–39.
  • Benitez, Vincent P. (2001). "Pitch Organization and Dramatic Design in Saint François d'Assise of Olivier Messiaen." PhD diss., Bloomington: Indiana University.
  • Benitez, Vincent P. (2002). "Simultaneous Contrast and Additive Designs in Olivier Messiaen's Opera Saint François d'Assise." Music Theory Online 8.2 (August 2002). Music Theory Online
  • Benitez, Vincent P. (2004). "Aspects of Harmony in Messiaen's Later Music: An Examination of the Chords of Transposed Inversions on the Same Bass Note." Journal of Musicological Research 23, no. 2: 187–226.
  • Benitez, Vincent P. (2004). "Narrating Saint Francis's Spiritual Journey: Referential Pitch Structures and Symbolic Images in Olivier Messiaen's Saint François d'Assise." In Poznan Studies on Opera, edited by Maciej Jablonski, 363–411.
  • Benitez, Vincent P. (2008). "Messiaen as Improviser." Dutch Journal of Music Theory 13, no. 2 (May 2008): 129–44.
  • Benitez, Vincent P. (2009). "Reconsidering Messiaen as Serialist." Music Analysis 28, nos. 2–3 (2009): 267–99 (published 21 April 2011).
  • Benitez, Vincent P. (2010). "Messiaen and Aquinas." In Messiaen the Theologian, edited by Andrew Shenton, 101–26. Aldershot: Ashgate.
  • Benítez, Vincent Pérez (2019). Olivier Messiaen's Opera, Saint François d'Assise. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-04287-3.
  • Boivin, Jean (1993). "La Classe de Messiaen: Historique, reconstitution, impact". Ph.D. diss. Montreal: Ecole Polytechnique, Montreal.
  • Boswell-Kurc, Lilise (2001). "Olivier Messiaen's Religious War-Time Works and Their Controversial Reception in France (1941–1946) ". Ph.D. diss. New York: New York University.
  • Bruhn, Siglind (2007). Messiaen's Contemplations of Covenant and Incarnation: Musical Symbols of Faith in the Two Great Piano Cycles of the 1940s. Hillsdale, NY: Pendragon Press. ISBN 978-1-57647-129-6.
  • Bruhn, Siglind (7 July 2008). Messiaen's Interpretations of Holiness and Trinity: Echoes of Medieval Theology in the Oratorio, Organ Meditations, and Opera. Dimension & diversity, no. 10. (1st ed.). Hillsdale, NY: Pendragon Press. p. 229. ISBN 978-1-57647-139-5. OCLC 227191541.
  • Burns, Jeffrey Phillips (1995). "Messiaen's Modes of Limited Transposition Reconsidered". M.M. thesis, Madison: University of Wisconsin-Madison.
  • Cheong Wai-Ling (2003). "Messiaen's Chord Tables: Ordering the Disordered". Tempo 57, no. 226 (October): 2–10.
  • Cheong Wai-Ling (2008). "Neumes and Greek Rhythms: The Breakthrough in Messiaen's Birdsong". Acta Musicologica 80, no. 1:1–32.
  • Dingle, Christopher (2013). Messiaen's Final Works. Farnham, UK: Ashgate. ISBN 978-0-7546-0633-8.
  • Fallon, Robert Joseph (2005). "Messiaen's Mimesis: The Language and Culture of The Bird Styles". Ph.D. diss. Berkeley: University of California, Berkeley.
  • Fallon, Robert (2008). "Birds, Beasts, and Bombs in Messiaen's Cold War Mass". The Journal of Musicology 26, no. 2 (Spring): 175–204.
  • Festa, Paul (2008). Oh My God: Messiaen in the Ear of the Unbeliever. San Francisco: Bar Nothing Books.
  • Goléa, Antoine (1960). Rencontres avec Olivier Messiaen. Paris: Julliard.
  • Hardink, Jason M. (2007). "Messiaen and Plainchant". D.M.A. diss. Houston: Rice University.
  • Harris, Joseph Edward (2004). "Musique coloree: Synesthetic Correspondence in the Works of Olivier Messiaen". Ph.D. diss. Ames: The University of Iowa.
  • Hill, Matthew Richard (1995). "Messiaen's Regard du silence as an Expression of Catholic Faith". D.M.A. diss. Madison: The University of Wisconsin, Madison.
  • Laycock, Gary Eng Yeow (2010). "Re-evaluating Olivier Messiaen's Musical Language from 1917 to 1935". Ph.D. diss. Bloomington: Indiana University, 2010.
  • Luchese, Diane (1998). "Olivier Messiaen's Slow Music: Glimpses of Eternity in Time". Ph.D. diss. Evanston: Northwestern University
  • McGinnis, Margaret Elizabeth (2003). "Playing the Fields: Messiaen, Music, and the Extramusical". Ph.D. diss. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
  • Nelson, David Lowell (1992). "An Analysis of Olivier Messiaen's Chant Paraphrases". 2 vols. Ph.D. diss. Evanston: Northwestern University
  • Ngim, Alan Gerald (1997). "Olivier Messiaen as a Pianist: A Study of Tempo and Rhythm Based on His Recordings of Visions de l'amen". D.M.A. diss. Coral Gables: University of Miami.
  • Peterson, Larry Wayne (1973). "Messiaen and Rhythm: Theory and Practice". Ph.D. diss. Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
  • Puspita, Amelia (2008). "The Influence of Balinese Gamelan on the Music of Olivier Messiaen". D.M.A. diss. Cincinnati: University of Cincinnati
  • Reverdy, Michèle (1988). L'Œuvre pour orchestre d'Olivier Messiaen. Paris: Alphonse Leduc. ISBN 978-2-85689-038-7.
  • Rischin, Rebecca (2006). For the End of Time: The Story of the Messiaen Quartet (New ed.). Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-7297-8.
  • Schultz, Rob (2008). "Melodic Contour and Nonretrogradable Structure in the Birdsong of Olivier Messiaen". Music Theory Spectrum 30, no. 1 (Spring): 89–137.
  • Shenton, Andrew (1998). "The Unspoken Word: Olivier Messiaen's 'langage communicable'". Ph.D. diss. Cambridge: Harvard University.
  • Shenton, Andrew (2008). Olivier Messiaen's System of Signs. Abingdon, Oxon & New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-7546-6168-9.
  • Shenton, Andrew, ed. (2010). Messiaen the Theologian. Abingdon, Oxon & New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-7546-6640-0.
  • Sholl, Robert (2008). Messiaen Studies. Cambridge & New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-83981-5.
  • Simeone, Nigel (2004). "'Chez Messiaen, tout est priére': Messiaen's Appointment at the Trinité". The Musical Times 145, no. 1889 (Winter): 36–53.
  • Simeone, Nigel (2008). "Messiaen, Koussevitzky and the USA". The Musical Times 149, no. 1905 (Winter): 25–44.
  • Waumsley, Stuart (1975). The Organ Music of Olivier Messiaen (New ed.). Paris: Alphonse Leduc. OCLC 2911308; LCCN 77-457244.
  • Welsh Ibanez, Deborah (2005). Color, Timbre, and Resonance: Developments in Olivier Messiaen's Use of Percussion Between 1956–1965. D.M.A. diss. Coral Gables: University of Miami
  • Zheng, Zhong (2004). A Study of Messiaen's Solo Piano Works. Ph.D. diss. Hong Kong: The Chinese University of Hong Kong.

Films

  • Apparition of the Eternal Church – Paul Festa's 2006 film about responses of 31 artists to Messiaen's music.
  • Messiaen at 80 (1988). Directed by Sue Knussen.[1]
  • Olivier Messiaen et les oiseaux (1973). Directed by Michel Fano and Denise Tual.
  • Olivier Messiaen – The Crystal Liturgy (2007 [DVD release date]). Directed by Olivier Mille.
  • Olivier Messiaen: Works (1991). DVD on which Messiaen performs "Improvisations" on the organ at the Paris Trinity Church.
  • The South Bank Show: Olivier Messiaen: The Music of Faith (1985). Directed by Alan Benson. .
  • Quartet for the End of Time, with the President's Own Marine Band Ensemble, A Film by H. Paul Moon

External links

  • "Messiaen, Olivier" in Oxford Music Online (by subscription)
  • BBC Messiaen Profile
  • oliviermessiaen.org Up to date website by Malcolm Ball, includes the latest recordings and concerts, a comprehensive bibliography, photos, analyses and reviews, a very extensive bio of Yvonne Loriod with discography, and more.
  • Infography about Olivier Messiaen
  • , hosted by the Boston University Messiaen Project [BUMP]. Includes detailed information on the composer's life and works, events, and links to other Messiaen websites.
  • www.philharmonia.co.uk/messiaen, the Philharmonia Orchestra's Messiaen website. The site contains articles, unseen images, programme notes and films to go alongside the orchestra's series of concerts celebrating the Centenary of Olivier Messiaen's birth.
  • Music for the End of Time, David Schiff article in The Nation, posted 25 January 2006 (13 February 2006 issue). Formally a review of Messiaen by Peter Hill and Nigel Simeone, but provides an overview of Messiaen's life and works.
  • Music and the Holocaust – Olivier Messiaen
  • "Olivier Messiaen (biography, works, resources)" (in French and English). IRCAM.
  • My Messiaen Modes A visual representation of Messiaen's modes of limited transposition.

Listening

  • Louange à l'immortalité de Jésus on YouTube played by Martina Trumpp, violin and Bohumir Stehlik, piano
  • Thème et variations – Helen Kim, violin; Adam Bowles, piano Luna Nova New Music Ensemble
  • Le merle noir – John McMurtery, flute; Adam Bowles, piano Luna Nova New Music Ensemble
  • Quatuor pour la fin du temps – Luna Nova New Music Ensemble
  • , Tom Poster, pianist
  • Example of Birdsong in Messiaen on YouTube played on a Mühleisen pipe organ
  • In-depth feature on Olivier Messiaen by Radio France International's English service
  • Oiseaux exotiques on YouTube by
  • Olivier Messiaen. Le Banquet Céleste (1928). Andrew Pink (2021) Exordia ad missam.

  1. ^

olivier, messiaen, olivier, eugène, prosper, charles, messiaen, french, ɔlivje, øʒɛn, pʁɔspɛʁ, ʃaʁl, mɛsjɑ, december, 1908, april, 1992, french, composer, organist, ornithologist, major, composers, 20th, century, music, rhythmically, complex, harmonically, mel. Olivier Eugene Prosper Charles Messiaen UK ˈ m ɛ s i ae 1 US m ɛ ˈ s j ae m eɪ ˈ s j ae m ɛ ˈ s j ɒ 2 3 4 French ɔlivje oʒɛn pʁɔspɛʁ ʃaʁl mɛsjɑ 10 December 1908 27 April 1992 was a French composer organist and ornithologist who was one of the major composers of the 20th century His music is rhythmically complex harmonically and melodically he employs a system he called modes of limited transposition which he abstracted from the systems of material generated by his early compositions and improvisations He wrote music for chamber ensembles and orchestra vocal music as well as for solo organ and piano and also experimented with the use of novel electronic instruments developed in Europe during his lifetime Olivier MessiaenMessiaen in 1986Born 1908 12 10 10 December 1908Avignon FranceDied27 April 1992 1992 04 27 aged 83 ClichyWorksList of compositionsSpousesClaire DelbosYvonne LoriodMessiaen entered the Paris Conservatoire at the age of 11 and studied with Paul Dukas Maurice Emmanuel Charles Marie Widor and Marcel Dupre among others He was appointed organist at the Eglise de la Sainte Trinite Paris in 1931 a post held for 61 years until his death He taught at the Schola Cantorum de Paris during the 1930s After the fall of France in 1940 Messiaen was interned for nine months in the German prisoner of war camp Stalag VIII A where he composed his Quatuor pour la fin du temps Quartet for the end of time for the four instruments available in the prison piano violin cello and clarinet The piece was first performed by Messiaen and fellow prisoners for an audience of inmates and prison guards 5 He was appointed professor of harmony soon after his release in 1941 and professor of composition in 1966 at the Paris Conservatoire positions that he held until his retirement in 1978 His many distinguished pupils included Iannis Xenakis George Benjamin Alexander Goehr Pierre Boulez Tristan Murail Karlheinz Stockhausen and Yvonne Loriod who became his second wife Messiaen perceived colours when he heard certain musical chords a phenomenon known as chromesthesia according to him combinations of these colours were important in his compositional process He travelled widely and wrote works inspired by diverse influences including Japanese music the landscape of Bryce Canyon in Utah and the life of St Francis of Assisi For a short period Messiaen experimented with the parametrisation associated with total serialism in which field he is often cited as an innovator His style absorbed many global musical influences such as Indonesian gamelan tuned percussion often features prominently in his orchestral works He found birdsong fascinating notating bird songs worldwide and incorporating birdsong transcriptions into his music His innovative use of colour his conception of the relationship between time and music and his use of birdsong are among the features that make Messiaen s music distinctive Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Youth and studies 1 2 La Trinite La jeune France and Messiaen s war 1 3 Tristan and serialism 1 4 Birdsong and the 1960s 1 5 Transfiguration Canyons St Francis and the Beyond 2 Music 2 1 Western influences 2 2 Colour 2 3 Symmetry 2 3 1 Time 2 3 2 Pitch 2 4 Time and rhythm 2 5 Harmony 2 6 Birdsong 2 7 Serialism 3 Writings 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 7 1 Films 8 External links 8 1 ListeningBiography EditYouth and studies Edit Messiaen with his mother and father in 1910 Olivier Eugene Prosper Charles Messiaen 6 was born on 10 December 1908 at 20 Boulevard Sixte Isnard in Avignon France into a literary family 7 He was the elder of two sons of Cecile Anne Marie Antoinette Sauvage fr a poet and Pierre Leon Joseph Messiaen fr a scholar and teacher of English from a farm near Wervicq Sud 8 who translated the plays of William Shakespeare into French 9 Messiaen s mother published a sequence of poems L ame en bourgeon The Budding Soul the last chapter of Tandis que la terre tourne As the Earth Turns which address her unborn son Messiaen later said this sequence of poems influenced him deeply and he cited it as prophetic of his future artistic career 10 His brother Alain Andre Prosper Messiaen fr four years his junior was also a poet At the outbreak of World War I Pierre enlisted and Cecile took their two boys to live with her brother in Grenoble There Messiaen became fascinated with drama reciting Shakespeare to his brother with the help of a home made toy theatre with translucent backdrops made from old cellophane wrappers 11 At this time he also adopted the Roman Catholic faith Later Messiaen felt most at home in the Alps of the Dauphine where he had a house built south of Grenoble where he composed most of his music 12 He took piano lessons having already taught himself to play His interests included the recent music of French composers Claude Debussy and Maurice Ravel and he asked for opera vocal scores for Christmas presents 13 He also saved to buy scores and one such was Edvard Grieg s Peer Gynt whose beautiful Norwegian melodic lines with the taste of folk song gave me a love of melody 14 Around this time he began to compose In 1918 his father returned from the war and the family moved to Nantes He continued music lessons one of his teachers Jehan de Gibon gifted him a score of Debussy s opera Pelleas et Melisande which Messiaen described as a thunderbolt and probably the most decisive influence on me 15 The following year Pierre Messiaen gained a teaching post at Sorbonne University in Paris Messiaen entered the Paris Conservatoire in 1919 aged 11 16 Paul Dukas s composition class at the Paris Conservatoire 1929 Messiaen sits at the far right Dukas stands at the centre Messiaen made excellent academic progress at the Paris Conservatoire In 1924 aged 15 he was awarded second prize in harmony having been taught in that subject by professor Jean Gallon In 1925 he won first prize in piano accompaniment and in 1926 he gained first prize in fugue After studying with Maurice Emmanuel he was awarded second prize for the history of music in 1928 17 Emmanuel s example engendered an interest in ancient Greek rhythms and exotic modes 18 After showing improvisational skills on the piano Messiaen studied organ with Marcel Dupre 19 Messiaen gained first prize in organ playing and improvisation in 1929 18 After a year studying composition with Charles Marie Widor in autumn 1927 he entered the class of the newly appointed Paul Dukas Messiaen s mother died of tuberculosis shortly before the class began 20 Despite his grief he resumed his studies and in 1930 Messiaen won first prize in composition 18 While a student he composed his first published works his eight Preludes for piano the earlier Le banquet celeste was published subsequently These exhibit Messiaen s use of his modes of limited transposition and palindromic rhythms Messiaen called these non retrogradable rhythms His official debut came in 1931 with his orchestral suite Les offrandes oubliees That year he first heard a gamelan group sparking his interest in the use of tuned percussion 21 La Trinite La jeune France and Messiaen s war Edit Eglise de la Sainte Trinite Paris where Messiaen was titular organist for 61 years In the autumn of 1927 Messiaen joined Dupre s organ course Dupre later wrote that Messiaen having never seen an organ console sat quietly for an hour while Dupre explained and demonstrated the instrument and then came back a week later to play Johann Sebastian Bach s Fantasia in C minor to an impressive standard 22 From 1929 Messiaen regularly deputised at the Eglise de la Sainte Trinite Paris for the ailing Charles Quef The post became vacant in 1931 when Quef died and Dupre Charles Tournemire and Widor among others supported Messiaen s candidacy His formal application included a letter of recommendation from Widor The appointment was confirmed in 1931 23 and he remained the organist at the church for more than 60 years 24 He also assumed a post at the Schola Cantorum de Paris in the early 1930s 25 In 1932 he composed the Apparition de l eglise eternelle for organ 26 With Claire Delbos He also married the violinist and composer Claire Delbos daughter of Victor Delbos that year Their marriage inspired him both to compose works for her to play Theme et variations for violin and piano in the year they were married and to write pieces to celebrate their domestic happiness including the song cycle Poemes pour Mi in 1936 which he orchestrated in 1937 Mi was Messiaen s affectionate nickname for his wife 27 On 14 July 1937 the Messiaens son Pascal Emmanuel was born Messiaen celebrated the occasion by writing Chants de Terre et de Ciel 28 The marriage turned to tragedy when Delbos lost her memory after an operation towards the end of World War II She spent the rest of her life in mental institutions 29 In 1934 Messiaen released his first major work for organ La Nativite du Seigneur He wrote a followup four years later titled Les Corps glorieux however it was premiered in 1945 In 1936 along with Andre Jolivet Daniel Lesur and Yves Baudrier Messiaen formed the group La jeune France Young France Their manifesto implicitly attacked the frivolity predominant in contemporary Parisian music and rejected Jean Cocteau s 1918 Le coq et l arlequin in favour of a living music having the impetus of sincerity generosity and artistic conscientiousness 30 Messiaen s career soon departed from this polemical phase In response to a commission for a piece to accompany light and water shows on the Seine during the Paris Exposition in 1937 Messiaen demonstrated his interest in using the ondes Martenot an electronic instrument by composing Fetes des belles eaux for an ensemble of six 31 He included a part for the instrument in several of his subsequent compositions 32 Messiaen by Studio Harcourt 1937 During this period he composed several multi movement organ works He arranged his orchestral suite L ascension for organ replacing the orchestral version s third movement with an entirely new movement Transports de joie d une ame devant la gloire du Christ qui est la sienne Ecstasies of a soul before the glory of Christ which is the soul s own listen help info 33 He also wrote the extensive cycles La Nativite du Seigneur The Nativity of the Lord and Les corps glorieux The glorious bodies 34 At the outbreak of World War II Messiaen was drafted into the French army Due to poor eyesight he was enlisted as a medical auxiliary rather than an active combatant 35 He was captured at Verdun where he befriended clarinettist Henri Akoka they were taken to Gorlitz in May 1940 and imprisoned at Stalag VIII A He met a cellist Etienne Pasquier and a violinist Jean le Boulaire fr among his fellow prisoners He wrote a trio for them which he gradually incorporated into a more expansive new work Quatuor pour la fin du temps Quartet for the End of Time 5 With the help of a friendly German guard Carl Albert Brull de he acquired manuscript paper and pencils 36 The work was first performed in January 1941 to an audience of prisoners and prison guards with the composer playing a poorly maintained upright piano in freezing conditions and the trio playing third hand unkempt instruments 37 The enforced introspection and reflection of camp life bore fruit in one of 20th century classical music s acknowledged masterpieces The title s end of time alludes to the Apocalypse and also to the way that Messiaen through rhythm and harmony used time in a manner completely different from his predecessors and contemporaries 38 The idea of a European Centre of Education and Culture Meeting Point Music Messiaen on the site of Stalag VIII A for children and youth artists musicians and everyone in the region emerged in December 2004 was developed with the involvement of Messiaen s widow as a joint project between the council districts in Germany and Poland and was finally completed in 2014 39 Tristan and serialism Edit See also List of students of Olivier Messiaen Shortly after his release from Gorlitz in May 1941 in large part due to the persuasions of his friend and teacher Marcel Dupre Messiaen who was now a household name was appointed a professor of harmony at the Paris Conservatoire where he taught until his retirement in 1978 40 He compiled his Technique de mon langage musical Technique of my musical language published in 1944 in which he quotes many examples from his music particularly the Quartet 41 Although only in his mid thirties his students described him as an outstanding teacher 42 Among his early students were the composers Pierre Boulez and Karel Goeyvaerts Other pupils included Karlheinz Stockhausen in 1952 Alexander Goehr in 1956 57 Tristan Murail in 1967 72 and George Benjamin during the late 1970s 43 The Greek composer Iannis Xenakis was referred to him in 1951 Messiaen urged Xenakis to take advantage of his background in mathematics and architecture in his music 44 In 1943 Messiaen wrote Visions de l Amen Visions of the Amen for two pianos for Yvonne Loriod and himself to perform Shortly thereafter he composed the enormous solo piano cycle Vingt regards sur l enfant Jesus Twenty gazes upon the child Jesus for her 45 Again for Loriod he wrote Trois petites liturgies de la presence divine Three small liturgies of the Divine Presence for female chorus and orchestra which includes a difficult solo piano part 46 Two years after Visions de l Amen Messiaen composed the song cycle Harawi the first of three works inspired by the legend of Tristan and Isolde The second of these works about human as opposed to divine love was the result of a commission from Serge Koussevitzky Messiaen stated that the commission did not specify the length of the work or the size of the orchestra This was the ten movement Turangalila Symphonie It is not a conventional symphony but rather an extended meditation on the joy of human union and love It does not contain the sexual guilt inherent in Richard Wagner s Tristan und Isolde because Messiaen believed that sexual love is a divine gift 35 The third piece inspired by the Tristan myth was Cinq rechants for twelve unaccompanied singers described by Messiaen as influenced by the alba of the troubadours 47 Messiaen visited the United States in 1949 where his music was conducted by Koussevitsky and Leopold Stokowski His Turangalila Symphonie was first performed in the US the same year conducted by Leonard Bernstein 48 Messiaen taught an analysis class at the Paris Conservatoire In 1947 he taught and performed with Loriod for two weeks in Budapest 49 In 1949 he taught at Tanglewood 50 and presented his work at the Darmstadt new music summer school 51 While he did not employ the twelve tone technique after three years teaching analysis of twelve tone scores including works by Arnold Schoenberg he experimented with ways of making scales of other elements including duration articulation and dynamics analogous to the chromatic pitch scale The results of these innovations was the Mode de valeurs et d intensites for piano from the Quatre etudes de rythme 52 which has been misleadingly described as the first work of total serialism It had a large influence on the earliest European serial composers including Pierre Boulez and Karlheinz Stockhausen 53 During this period he also experimented with musique concrete music for recorded sounds 54 Birdsong and the 1960s Edit When in 1952 Messiaen was asked to provide a test piece for flautists at the Paris Conservatoire he composed the piece Le Merle noir for flute and piano While he had long been fascinated by birdsong and birds had made appearances in several of his earlier works for example La Nativite Quatuor and Vingt regards the flute piece was based entirely on the song of the blackbird 55 He took this development to a new level with his 1953 orchestral work Reveil des oiseaux its material consists almost entirely of the birdsong one might hear between midnight and noon in the Jura 56 From this period onwards Messiaen incorporated birdsong into his compositions and composed several works for which birds provide both the title and subject matter for example the collection of thirteen pieces for piano Catalogue d oiseaux completed in 1958 and La fauvette des jardins of 1971 57 Paul Griffiths observed that Messiaen was a more conscientious ornithologist than any previous composer and a more musical observer of birdsong than any previous ornithologist 58 Yvonne Loriod teaching piano 1982 Messiaen s first wife died in 1959 after a long illness and in 1961 he married Loriod 59 He began to travel widely to attend musical events and to seek out and transcribe the songs of more exotic birds in the wild Despite this he only spoke French Loriod frequently assisted her husband s detailed studies of birdsong while walking with him by making tape recordings for later reference 60 In 1962 he visited Japan where Gagaku music and Noh theatre inspired the orchestral Japanese sketches Sept haikai which contain stylised imitations of traditional Japanese instruments 61 Messiaen s music was by this time championed by among others Pierre Boulez who programmed first performances at his Domaine musical concerts and the Donaueschingen festival 62 Works performed included Reveil des oiseaux Chronochromie commissioned for the 1960 festival and Couleurs de la cite celeste The latter piece was the result of a commission for a composition for three trombones and three xylophones Messiaen added to this more brass wind percussion and piano and specified a xylophone xylorimba and marimba rather than three xylophones 63 Another work of this period Et exspecto resurrectionem mortuorum was commissioned as a commemoration of the dead of the two World Wars and was performed first semi privately in the Sainte Chapelle then publicly in Chartres Cathedral with Charles de Gaulle in the audience 64 His reputation as a composer continued to grow and in 1959 he was nominated as an Officier of the Legion d honneur 65 In 1966 he was officially appointed professor of composition at the Paris Conservatoire although he had in effect been teaching composition for years 66 Further honours included election to the Institut de France in 1967 and the Academie des beaux arts in 1968 the Erasmus Prize in 1971 the award of the Royal Philharmonic Society Gold Medal and the Ernst von Siemens Music Prize in 1975 the Sonning Award Denmark s highest musical honour in 1977 the Wolf Prize in Arts in 1982 and the presentation of the Croix de Commander of the Belgian Order of the Crown in 1980 67 Transfiguration Canyons St Francis and the Beyond Edit Messiaen s next work was the large scale La Transfiguration de Notre Seigneur Jesus Christ The composition occupied him from 1965 to 1969 and the musicians employed include a 100 voice ten part choir seven solo instruments and large orchestra Its fourteen movements are a meditation on the story of Christ s Transfiguration 68 Shortly after its completion Messiaen received a commission from Alice Tully for a work to celebrate the U S bicentennial He arranged a visit to the US in spring 1972 and was inspired by Bryce Canyon in Utah where he observed the canyon s distinctive colours and birdsong 69 The twelve movement orchestral piece Des canyons aux etoiles was the result first performed in 1974 in New York 70 An ondes Martenot an electronic instrument for which Messiaen included a part in several of his compositions the orchestra for his opera Saint Francois d Assise includes three of them In 1971 he was asked to compose a piece for the Paris Opera While reluctant to undertake such a major project he was persuaded by French president Georges Pompidou to accept the commission and began work on his Saint Francois d Assise in 1975 after two years of preparation The composition was intensive he also wrote his own libretto and occupied him from 1975 to 1979 the orchestration was carried out from 1979 until 1983 71 Messiaen preferred to describe the final work as a spectacle rather than an opera It was first performed in 1983 Some commentators at the time thought that the opera would be his valediction at times Messiaen himself believed so 72 but he continued to compose In 1984 he published a major collection of organ pieces Livre du Saint Sacrement other works include birdsong pieces for solo piano and works for piano with orchestra 73 In the summer of 1978 Messiaen was forced to retire from teaching at the Paris Conservatoire due to French law He was promoted to the highest rank of the Legion d honneur the Grand Croix in 1987 and was awarded the decoration in London by his old friend Jean Langlais 74 An operation prevented his participation in the celebration of his 70th birthday in 1978 75 but in 1988 tributes for Messiaen s 80th included a complete performance in London s Royal Festival Hall of St Francois which the composer attended 76 and Erato s publication of a seventeen CD collection of Messiaen s music including a disc of the composer in conversation with Claude Samuel 77 Although in considerable pain near the end of his life requiring repeated surgery on his back 78 he was able to fulfil a commission from the New York Philharmonic Orchestra Eclairs sur l au dela which was premiered six months after his death He died in the Beaujon Hospital in Clichy on 27 April 1992 aged 83 79 On going through his papers Loriod discovered that in the last months of his life he had been composing a concerto for four musicians he felt particularly grateful to namely herself the cellist Mstislav Rostropovich the oboist Heinz Holliger and the flautist Catherine Cantin 80 hence the title Concert a quatre Four of the five intended movements were substantially complete Yvonne Loriod undertook the orchestration of the second half of the first movement and of the whole of the fourth with advice from George Benjamin It was premiered by the dedicatees in September 1994 81 Music EditSee also List of compositions by Olivier Messiaen Example 1 A page from Oiseaux exotiques It illustrates Messiaen s use of ancient and exotic rhythms in the percussion near the bottom of the score Asclepiad and Sapphic are ancient Greek rhythms and Nibcankalila is a deci tala from Sarṅgadeva It also illustrates Messiaen s precision in notating birdsong the birds identified here are the white crested laughing thrush garralaxe a huppe blanche in the brass and wind instruments and the orchard oriole troupiale des vergers played on the xylophone Messiaen s music has been described as outside the western musical tradition although growing out of that tradition and being influenced by it 82 Much of his output denies the western conventions of forward motion development and diatonic harmonic resolution This is partly due to the symmetries of his technique for instance the modes of limited transposition do not admit the conventional cadences found in western classical music 83 His youthful love for the fairy tale element in Shakespeare prefigured his later expressions of Catholic liturgy 84 Messiaen was not interested in depicting aspects of theology such as sin 85 rather he concentrated on the theology of joy divine love and redemption 86 Messiaen continually evolved new composition techniques always integrating them into his existing musical style his final works still retain the use of modes of limited transposition 83 For many commentators this continual development made every major work from the Quatuor onwards a conscious summation of all that Messiaen had composed up to that time However very few of these major works lack new technical ideas simple examples being the introduction of communicable language in Meditations the invention of a new percussion instrument the geophone for Des canyons aux etoiles and the freedom from any synchronisation with the main pulse of individual parts in certain birdsong episodes of St Francois d Assise 87 As well as discovering new techniques Messiaen studied and absorbed foreign music including Ancient Greek rhythms 18 Hindu rhythms he encountered Sarṅgadeva s list of 120 rhythmic units the deci talas 88 Balinese and Javanese Gamelan birdsong and Japanese music see Example 1 for an instance of his use of ancient Greek and Hindu rhythms 89 While he was instrumental in the academic exploration of his techniques he compiled two treatises the later one in five volumes was substantially complete when he died and was published posthumously and was himself a master of music analysis he considered the development and study of techniques a means to intellectual aesthetic and emotional ends Thus Messiaen maintained that a musical composition must be measured against three separate criteria it must be interesting beautiful to listen to and it must touch the listener 90 Messiaen wrote a large body of music for the piano Although a considerable pianist himself he was undoubtedly assisted by Yvonne Loriod s formidable piano technique and ability to convey complex rhythms and rhythmic combinations in his piano writing from Visions de l Amen onwards he had her in mind Messiaen said I am able to allow myself the greatest eccentricities because to her anything is possible 91 Western influences Edit Developments in modern French music were a major influence on Messiaen particularly the music of Claude Debussy and his use of the whole tone scale which Messiaen called Mode 1 in his modes of limited transposition Messiaen rarely used the whole tone scale in his compositions because he said after Debussy and Dukas there was nothing to add 92 but the modes he did use are similarly symmetrical Messiaen had a great admiration for the music of Igor Stravinsky particularly the use of rhythm in earlier works such as The Rite of Spring and his use of orchestral colour He was further influenced by the orchestral brilliance of Heitor Villa Lobos who lived in Paris in the 1920s and gave acclaimed concerts there Among composers for the keyboard Messiaen singled out Jean Philippe Rameau Domenico Scarlatti Frederic Chopin Debussy and Isaac Albeniz 91 He loved the music of Modest Mussorgsky and incorporated varied modifications of what he called the M shaped melodic motif from Mussorgsky s Boris Godunov 92 although he modified the final interval in this motif from a perfect fourth to a tritone Example 3 93 Messiaen was further influenced by Surrealism as may be seen from the titles of some of the piano Preludes Un reflet dans le vent A reflection in the wind 94 and in some of the imagery of his poetry he published poems as prefaces to certain works for example Les offrandes oubliees 95 Colour Edit Colour lies at the heart of Messiaen s music He believed that terms such as tonal modal and serial are misleading analytical conveniences 96 For him there were no modal tonal or serial compositions only music with or without colour 97 He said that Claudio Monteverdi Mozart Chopin Richard Wagner Mussorgsky and Stravinsky all wrote strongly coloured music 98 In some of Messiaen s scores he notated the colours in the music notably in Couleurs de la cite celeste and Des canyons aux etoiles the purpose being to aid the conductor in interpretation rather than to specify which colours the listener should experience The importance of colour is linked to Messiaen s synaesthesia which caused him to experience colours when he heard or imagined music his form of synaesthesia the most common form involved experiencing the associated colours in a non visual form rather than perceiving them visually In his multi volume music theory treatise Traite de rythme de couleur et d ornithologie Treatise of Rhythm Colour and Birdsong Messiaen wrote descriptions of the colours of certain chords His descriptions range from the simple gold and brown to the highly detailed blue violet rocks speckled with little grey cubes cobalt blue deep Prussian blue highlighted by a bit of violet purple gold red ruby and stars of mauve black and white Blue violet is dominant 99 100 When asked what Messiaen s main influence had been on composers George Benjamin said I think the sheer colour has been so influential rather than being a decorative element Messiaen showed that colour could be a structural a fundamental element the fundamental material of the music itself 101 Symmetry Edit Many of Messiaen s composition techniques made use of symmetries of time and pitch 102 Time Edit Example 2 The first bar of the piano Prelude Instants defunts An early example of Messiaen s use of palindromic rhythms which he called non retrogradable rhythms From his earliest works Messiaen used non retrogradable palindromic rhythms Example 2 He sometimes combined rhythms with harmonic sequences in such a way that if the process were repeated indefinitely the music would eventually run through all possible permutations and return to its starting point For Messiaen this represented the charm of impossibilities of these processes He only ever presented a portion of any such process as if allowing the informed listener a glimpse of something eternal In the first movement of Quatuor pour la fin du temps the piano and cello together provide an early example 103 Pitch Edit Messiaen used modes he called modes of limited transposition 83 They are distinguished as groups of notes that can only be transposed by a semitone a limited number of times For example the whole tone scale Messiaen s Mode 1 only exists in two transpositions namely C D E F G A and D E F G A B Messiaen abstracted these modes from the harmony of his improvisations and early works 104 Music written using the modes avoids conventional diatonic harmonic progressions since for example Messiaen s Mode 2 identical to the octatonic scale used also by other composers permits precisely the dominant seventh chords whose tonic the mode does not contain 105 Time and rhythm Edit Example 3 An excerpt from Danse de la fureur pour les sept trompettes from Quatuor pour la fin du temps It illustrates Messiaen s use of additive rhythms in this example the addition of unpaired semiquavers sixteenth notes to an underlying quaver eighth note pulse and the lengthening of the final quaver by addition of a dot It illustrates the use of what Messiaen called the Boris M shaped motif the last five notes of the excerpt As well as making use of non retrogradable rhythm and the Hindu deci talas Messiaen also composed with additive rhythms This involves lengthening individual notes slightly or interpolating a short note into an otherwise regular rhythm see Example 3 or shortening or lengthening every note of a rhythm by the same duration adding a semiquaver to every note in a rhythm on its repeat for example 106 This led Messiaen to use rhythmic cells that irregularly alternate between two and three units a process that also occurs in Stravinsky s The Rite of Spring which Messiaen admired 107 A factor that contributes to Messiaen s suspension of the conventional perception of time in his music is the extremely slow tempos he often specifies the fifth movement Louange a l eternite de Jesus of Quatuor is actually given the tempo marking infiniment lent 108 Messiaen also used the concept of chromatic durations for example in his Soixante quatre durees from Livre d orgue listen help info which is built from in Messiaen s words 64 chromatic durations from 1 to 64 demisemiquavers thirty second notes invested in groups of 4 from the ends to the centre forwards and backwards alternately treated as a retrograde canon The whole peopled with birdsong 109 Harmony Edit Example 4 The song of the golden oriole from Le loriot part of Catalogue d oiseaux The birdsong played by the pianist s left hand notated on the lower staff provides the fundamental notes and the quieter harmonies played by the right hand on the upper staff alter their timbre In addition to making harmonic use of the modes of limited transposition he cited the harmonic series as a physical phenomenon that provides chords with a context he felt was missing in purely serial music 110 An example of Messiaen s harmonic use of this phenomenon which he called resonance is the last two bars of his first piano Prelude La colombe The dove the chord is built from harmonics of the fundamental base note E 111 Related to this use of resonance Messiaen also composed music in which the lowest or fundamental note is combined with higher notes or chords played much more quietly These higher notes far from being perceived as conventional harmony function as harmonics that alter the timbre of the fundamental note like mixture stops on a pipe organ 112 An example is the song of the golden oriole in Le loriot of the Catalogue d oiseaux for solo piano Example 4 In his use of conventional diatonic chords Messiaen often transcended their historically mundane connotations for example his frequent use of the added sixth chord as a resolution 113 Birdsong Edit The garden warbler provided the title and much of the material for Messiaen s La fauvette des jardins Birdsong fascinated Messiaen from an early age and in this he found encouragement from his teacher Dukas who reportedly urged his pupils to listen to the birds Messiaen included stylised birdsong in some of his early compositions including L abime d oiseaux from the Quatuor pour la fin du temps integrating it into his sound world by techniques like the modes of limited transposition and chord colouration His evocations of birdsong became increasingly sophisticated and with Le reveil des oiseaux this process reached maturity the whole piece being built from birdsong in effect it is a dawn chorus for orchestra The same can be said for Epode the five minute sixth movement of Chronochromie which is scored for eighteen violins each one playing a different birdsong Messiaen notated the bird species with the music in the score examples 1 and 4 The pieces are not simple transcriptions even the works with purely bird inspired titles such as Catalogue d oiseaux and Fauvette des jardins are tone poems evoking the landscape its colours and atmosphere 114 Serialism Edit For a few compositions Messiaen created scales for duration attack and timbre analogous to the chromatic pitch scale He expressed annoyance at the historical importance given to one of these works Mode de valeurs et d intensites by musicologists intent on crediting him with the invention of total serialism 90 Messiaen later introduced what he called a communicable language a musical alphabet to encode sentences He first used this technique in his Meditations sur le Mystere de la Sainte Trinite for organ where the alphabet includes motifs for the concepts to have to be and God while the sentences encoded feature sections from the writings of St Thomas Aquinas 115 Writings EditMessiaen Olivier 1933 Vingt lecons de solfege modernes Paris Editions H Lemoine OCLC 1080796385 1936 Ariane et Barbe Bleue de Paul Dukas La Revue musicale No 116 pp 79 86 31 March 1938 Les sept chorals poemes pour les sept paroles du Christ en croix Le monde musical es No 3 p 34 May 1938 L orgue mystique de Tournemire Syrinx pp 26 27 1939 Le rythme chez Igor Strawinsky La Revue musicale No 191 pp 91 92 1939 Vingt lecons d harmonie Paris Alphonse Leduc OCLC 843636910 1944 Technique de mon langage musical Paris Alphonse Leduc OCLC 690654311 116 1946 Preface Mana Six pieces pour piano By Jolivet Andre Paris Costallat OCLC 884442941 1947 Maurice Emmanuel ses Trente chansons bourguignonnes La Revue musicale No 206 pp 107 108 1958 Musikalisches Glaubens bekenntnis Melos No 25 12 pp 381 385 1960 Conference de Bruxelles Paris Alphonse Leduc OCLC 855187 Essentially a republishing of Messiaen 1958 1970 Preface La prophetie musicale dans l histoire de l humanite precedee d une etude sur les nombres et les planetes dans leur rapports avec la musique By Roustit Albert Roanne Horvath 1978 Conference de Notre Dame Paris Alphonse Leduc OCLC 4354577 1986 Messiaen on Messiaen The Composer Writes about His Works Bloomington Frangipani Press OCLC 911921727 1987 Les 22 concertos pour piano de Mozart Paris Librairie Seguier OCLC 928373831 1988 Conference de Kyoto Introduction and Japanese translation by Naoko Tamamura Paris Alphonse Leduc OCLC 22921969 1991 Preface Tandis que la terre tourne By Paris Librairie Seguier OCLC 463610307 1994 2002 Traite de rythme de couleur et d ornithologie 7 volumes Paris Alphonse Leduc OCLC 931220676 Loriod Yvonne Analyses des oeuvres pour piano de Maurice Ravel Paris Editions Durand OCLC 995326437 See also EditOlivier Messiaen CompetitionNotes Edit Messiaen Olivier Lexico UK English Dictionary Oxford University Press dead link Messiaen The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 5th ed HarperCollins Retrieved 18 August 2019 Messiaen Collins English Dictionary HarperCollins Retrieved 18 August 2019 Messiaen Merriam Webster Dictionary Retrieved 18 August 2019 a b Brown Kellie D 2020 The sound of hope Music as solace resistance and salvation during the holocaust and world war II McFarland pp 168 175 ISBN 978 1 4766 7056 0 Avignon Civil Records Olivier Eugene Prosper Charles Messiaen s birth certificate PDF Dingle 2007 p 3 Visions of Amen The Early Life and Music of Olivier Messiaen Stephen Schloesser Hill amp Simeone 2005 pp 10 14 Messiaen amp Samuel 1994 p 15 Messiaen amp Samuel 1994 p 41 Hill 1995 pp 300 301 Messiaen amp Samuel 1994 p 109 Christopher Dingle The Life of Messiaen London Cambridge University Press 2007 7 Messiaen amp Samuel 1994 p 110 Hill amp Simeone 2005 p 16 Hill amp Simeone 2005 pp 16 17 a b c d Sherlaw Johnson 1975 p 10 Bannister 2013 p 171 Hill amp Simeone 2005 p 20 For further discussion of Messiaen s youth see generally Hill amp Simeone 2005 Hill amp Simeone 2005 p 22 Hill amp Simeone 2005 pp 34 37 Heller 2010 p 68 Dingle 2007 p 45 Gillock 2009 p 32 Sherlaw Johnson 1975 pp 56 57 Gillock 2009 p 381 Yvonne Loriod in Hill 1995 p 294 From the programme for the opening concert of La jeune France quoted in Griffiths 1985 p 72 Hill amp Simeone 2005 pp 73 75 Dingle 2013 p 34 Benitez 2008 p 288 Hill amp Simeone 2005 p 115 a b Griffiths 1985 p 139 Ross Alex 22 March 2004 The Rest Is Noise Messiaen s Quartet for the End of Time The New Yorker Retrieved 17 May 2012 Rischin 2003 p 5 See extended discussion in Griffiths 1985 Chapter 6 A Technique for the End of Time particularly pp 104 106 European Center Memory Education Culture Meetingpoint Music Messiaen e V 17 April 2020 Retrieved 27 May 2020 Benitez 2008 p 155 Benitez 2008 p 33 Pierre Boulez in Hill 1995 pp 266ff Benitez 2008 p xiii Matossian 1986 p 48 Sherlaw Johnson 1975 pp 11 64 Hill amp Simeone 2007 p 21 Griffiths 1985 p 142 Hill amp Simeone 2005 pp 186 192 Benitez 2008 p 3 Hill amp Simeone 2005 p 415 Iddon 2013 p 31 Sherlaw Johnson 1975 p 104 Sherlaw Johnson 1975 pp 192 194 Hill amp Simeone 2005 p 198 Dingle 2007 p 139 For a general discussion of Messiaen s fusion of birdsong and music see Hill amp Simeone 2007 Hill amp Simeone 2007 p 27 Kraft 2013 Griffiths 1985 p 168 see also Kraft 2013 Benitez 2008 p 4 Benitez 2008 p 138 Messiaen s visit to Japan is documented in Hill amp Simeone 2005 pp 245 251 and there is a more technical discussion in Griffiths 1985 pp 197 200 Malcolm Troup writing in Hill 1995 additionally notes the direct influence of Noh theatre on aspects of Messiaen s opera St Francois d Assise Benitez 2008 p 280 Sherlaw Johnson 1975 p 166 Simeone 2009 pp 185 195 Hill amp Simeone 2005 p 245 Hill amp Simeone 2005 p 306 Hill amp Simeone 2005 p 333 Bruhn 2008a pp 57 96 Griffiths 1985 p 225 Hill amp Simeone 2005 p 301 Programme for Opera de la Bastille production of St Francois d Assise p 18 The composer in conversation with Jean Cristophe Marti in 1992 see p 29 of booklet accompanying the recording of Saint Francois d Assise conducted by Kent Nagano on Deutsche Grammophon PolyGram 445 176 see also Hill amp Simeone 2005 pp 340 and 342 Dingle 2013 Hill amp Simeone 2005 p 357 Dingle 2007 p 207 Hill amp Simeone 2005 p 371 Messiaen Edition ArkivMusic Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 8 September 2013 Yvonne Loriod in Hill 1995 p 302 Gillock 2009 p 383 Catherine Cantin Flutist MusicalWorld com musicalworld com Dingle 2013 pp 293 310 Griffiths 1985 p 15 a b c Griffiths 1985 Introduction Olivier Messiaen Schott Music Archived from the original on 8 September 2013 Retrieved 8 September 2013 Messiaen amp Samuel 1994 p 213 Bruhn Siglind Deely John January 1996 Religious Symbolism in the Music of Olivier Messiaen The American Journal of Semiotics 13 1 277 309 doi 10 5840 ajs1996131 412 See for instance Griffiths 1985 p 233 Des canyons aux etoiles is therefore not so much a synthesis as has sometimes been suggested but more a step into the future that also joins the circle with the composer s past Messiaen amp Samuel 1994 p 77 Coleman John 24 November 2008 Maestro of Joy America the National Catholic Review Retrieved 8 September 2013 a b Messiaen amp Samuel 1994 p 47 a b Messiaen amp Samuel 1994 p 114 a b Messiaen Technique de mon langage musical Bruhn 2008a p 46 Sherlaw Johnson 1975 p 26 Sherlaw Johnson 1975 p 76 Messiaen amp Samuel 1994 pp 49 50 Messiaen amp Samuel 1994 p 63 Messiaen amp Samuel 1994 p 62 See Messiaen Olivier Traite de rythme de couleur et d ornithologie See also Bernard Jonathan W 1986 Messiaen s Synaesthesia The Correspondence between Color and Sound Structure in His Music Music Perception 4 41 68 Fink Monika 2003 Farb Klange und Klang Farben im Werk von Olivier Messiaen Music in Art International Journal for Music Iconography 28 1 2 163 172 ISSN 1522 7464 George Benjamin speaking in interview with Tommy Pearson broadcast on BBC4 in the interval of Prom concert in 2004 at which Benjamin conducted a performance of Des canyons aux etoiles Asked what made Messiaen so influential he said I think the sheer the word he loved colour has been so influential People composers have found that colour rather than being a decorative element could be a structural a fundamental element And not colour just in a surface way not just in the way you orchestrate it no the fundamental material of the music itself More than that I can t say except that for my own small world he was incredibly important and an exceptionally special and indeed wonderful person I met him when I was very young I was 16 and stayed closely in touch with him until he died in 1992 and was immensely fond of him Benitez Vincent July 2009 Reconsidering Messiaen as Serialist Music Analysis 28 2 3 267 299 doi 10 1111 j 1468 2249 2011 00293 x For discussion see for example Iain G Matheson s article The End of Time in Hill 1995 particularly pp 237 243 Hill 1995 p 17 Griffiths 1985 p 32 Bruhn 2008a pp 37 49 Dingle amp Simeone 2007 p 48 Pople 1998 p 82 Quoted by Gillian Weir who discusses the work in Hill 1995 pp 364 366 Messiaen amp Samuel 1994 pp 241 242 Griffiths 1985 p 34 Benitez Vincent April 2004 Aspects of Harmony in Messiaen s Later Music An Examination of the Chords of Transposed Inversions on the Same Bass Note Journal of Musicological Research 23 2 187 226 doi 10 1080 01411890490449781 S2CID 191492252 Bruhn Siglind 2008 Traces of a Thomistic De musica in the Compositions of Olivier Messiaen Logos 11 4 16 56 doi 10 1353 log 0 0015 S2CID 51268362 For extensive discussion of the use of birdsong in Messiaen s work see Kraft 2013 See for example Richard Steinitz in Hill 1995 pp 466 469 Broad Stephen Technique de mon langage musical The Routledge Encyclopedia of Modernism Taylor and Francis 2016 Date Accessed 1 December 2021 https www rem routledge com articles technique de mon langage musical doi 10 4324 9781135000356 REM601 1References EditBannister Peter 2013 Olivier Messiaen 1908 1992 In Anderson Christopher S ed Twentieth century organ music New York Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 49790 2 Benitez Vincent P 2008 Olivier Messiaen A Research and Information Guide New York and London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 97372 4 Benitez Vincent P 2018 Olivier Messiaen A Research and Information Guide 2nd ed New York and London Routledge ISBN 978 0 367 87354 7 Bruhn Siglind 2007 Messiaen s Contemplations of Covenant and Incarnation Musical Symbols of Faith in the Two Great Piano Cycles of the 1940s Hillsdale NY Pendragon Press ISBN 978 1 57647 129 6 Bruhn Siglind 2008a Messiaen s Interpretations of Holiness and Trinity Echoes of Medieval Theology in the Oratorio Organ Meditations and Opera Hillsdale NY Pendragon Press ISBN 978 1 57647 139 5 Bruhn Siglind 2008b Messiaen s Explorations of Love and Death Musico poetic Signification in the Tristan Trilogy and Three Related Song Cycles Hillsdale NY Pendragon Press ISBN 978 1 57647 136 4 Dingle Christopher 2007 The Life of Messiaen Cambridge amp New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 63547 9 Dingle Christopher 2013 Messiaen s final works Burlington VT Ashgate ISBN 978 0 7546 0633 8 Dingle Christopher Simeone Nigel eds 2007 Olivier Messiaen Music Art and Literature Aldershot Ashgate ISBN 978 0 7546 5297 7 Gillock Jon 2009 Performing Messiaen s Organ Music 66 Masterclasses Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 35373 3 Griffiths Paul 1985 Olivier Messiaen and the Music of Time Ithaca New York Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 1813 6 Griffiths Paul 2001 Messiaen Olivier Eugene Prosper Charles In Sadie Stanley Tyrrell John eds The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians Oxford Music Online second ed London Macmillan Publishers doi 10 1093 gmo 9781561592630 article 18497 Griffiths Paul Nichols Roger 2002 Messiaen Olivier Eugene Prosper Charles In Latham ed The Oxford Companion to Music new ed Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 866212 9 Heller Karin 2010 Olivier Messiaen and Cardinal Jean Marie Lustiger In Shenton Andrew ed Messiaen the theologian Farnham Ashgate ISBN 978 0 7546 6640 0 Hill Peter ed 1995 The Messiaen Companion London Faber and Faber ISBN 978 0 571 17033 3 Hill Peter Simeone Nigel 2005 Messiaen New Haven and London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 10907 8 Hill Peter Simeone Nigel eds 2007 Olivier Messiaen Oiseaux exotiques Aldershot Ashgate ISBN 978 0 7546 5630 2 Iddon Martin 2013 New Music at Darmstadt Nono Stockhausen Cage and Boulez Music since 1900 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 03329 0 Kraft David 2013 Birdsong in the Music of Olivier Messiaen London Arosa Press ISBN 978 1 4775 1779 6 Matossian Nouritza 1986 Xenakis London Kahn and Averill ISBN 978 1 871082 17 3 Pople Anthony 1998 Messiaen Quatuor pour la fin du temps Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 58538 5 Rischin Rebecca 2003 For the End of Time The Story of the Messiaen Quartet Ithaca N Y Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 4136 3 Samuel Claude tr E Thomas Glasow 1994 Olivier Messiaen Music and Color Conversations with Claude Samuel Portland Oregon Amadeus Press ISBN 978 0 931340 67 3 Shenton Andrew 2008 Olivier Messiaen s System of Signs Notes towards Understanding his Music Aldershot Ashgate ISBN 978 0 7546 6168 9 Shenton Andrew 2010 Messiaen the Theologian Aldershot Ashgate ISBN 978 0 7546 6640 0 Sherlaw Johnson Robert 1975 Messiaen Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 02812 8 Simeone Nigel 2009 Un oeuvre simple solennelle In Shenton Andrew ed Messiaen the theologian Farnham Ashgate ISBN 978 0 7546 6640 0 Further reading EditBaggech Melody Ann 1998 An English Translation of Olivier Messiaen s Traite de Rythme de Couleur et d Ornithologie Norman The University of Oklahoma Barker Thomas 2012 The Social and Aesthetic Situation of Olivier Messiaen s Religious Music Turangalila Symphonie International Review of the Aesthetics and Sociology of Music 43 1 53 70 Benitez Vincent P 2000 A Creative Legacy Messiaen as Teacher of Analysis College Music Symposium 40 117 39 Benitez Vincent P 2001 Pitch Organization and Dramatic Design in Saint Francois d Assise of Olivier Messiaen PhD diss Bloomington Indiana University Benitez Vincent P 2002 Simultaneous Contrast and Additive Designs in Olivier Messiaen s Opera Saint Francois d Assise Music Theory Online 8 2 August 2002 Music Theory Online Benitez Vincent P 2004 Aspects of Harmony in Messiaen s Later Music An Examination of the Chords of Transposed Inversions on the Same Bass Note Journal of Musicological Research 23 no 2 187 226 Benitez Vincent P 2004 Narrating Saint Francis s Spiritual Journey Referential Pitch Structures and Symbolic Images in Olivier Messiaen s Saint Francois d Assise In Poznan Studies on Opera edited by Maciej Jablonski 363 411 Benitez Vincent P 2008 Messiaen as Improviser Dutch Journal of Music Theory 13 no 2 May 2008 129 44 Benitez Vincent P 2009 Reconsidering Messiaen as Serialist Music Analysis 28 nos 2 3 2009 267 99 published 21 April 2011 Benitez Vincent P 2010 Messiaen and Aquinas In Messiaen the Theologian edited by Andrew Shenton 101 26 Aldershot Ashgate Benitez Vincent Perez 2019 Olivier Messiaen s Opera Saint Francois d Assise Bloomington IN Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 04287 3 Boivin Jean 1993 La Classe de Messiaen Historique reconstitution impact Ph D diss Montreal Ecole Polytechnique Montreal Boswell Kurc Lilise 2001 Olivier Messiaen s Religious War Time Works and Their Controversial Reception in France 1941 1946 Ph D diss New York New York University Bruhn Siglind 2007 Messiaen s Contemplations of Covenant and Incarnation Musical Symbols of Faith in the Two Great Piano Cycles of the 1940s Hillsdale NY Pendragon Press ISBN 978 1 57647 129 6 Bruhn Siglind 7 July 2008 Messiaen s Interpretations of Holiness and Trinity Echoes of Medieval Theology in the Oratorio Organ Meditations and Opera Dimension amp diversity no 10 1st ed Hillsdale NY Pendragon Press p 229 ISBN 978 1 57647 139 5 OCLC 227191541 Burns Jeffrey Phillips 1995 Messiaen s Modes of Limited Transposition Reconsidered M M thesis Madison University of Wisconsin Madison Cheong Wai Ling 2003 Messiaen s Chord Tables Ordering the Disordered Tempo 57 no 226 October 2 10 Cheong Wai Ling 2008 Neumes and Greek Rhythms The Breakthrough in Messiaen s Birdsong Acta Musicologica 80 no 1 1 32 Dingle Christopher 2013 Messiaen s Final Works Farnham UK Ashgate ISBN 978 0 7546 0633 8 Fallon Robert Joseph 2005 Messiaen s Mimesis The Language and Culture of The Bird Styles Ph D diss Berkeley University of California Berkeley Fallon Robert 2008 Birds Beasts and Bombs in Messiaen s Cold War Mass The Journal of Musicology 26 no 2 Spring 175 204 Festa Paul 2008 Oh My God Messiaen in the Ear of the Unbeliever San Francisco Bar Nothing Books Golea Antoine 1960 Rencontres avec Olivier Messiaen Paris Julliard Hardink Jason M 2007 Messiaen and Plainchant D M A diss Houston Rice University Harris Joseph Edward 2004 Musique coloree Synesthetic Correspondence in the Works of Olivier Messiaen Ph D diss Ames The University of Iowa Hill Matthew Richard 1995 Messiaen s Regard du silence as an Expression of Catholic Faith D M A diss Madison The University of Wisconsin Madison Laycock Gary Eng Yeow 2010 Re evaluating Olivier Messiaen s Musical Language from 1917 to 1935 Ph D diss Bloomington Indiana University 2010 Luchese Diane 1998 Olivier Messiaen s Slow Music Glimpses of Eternity in Time Ph D diss Evanston Northwestern University McGinnis Margaret Elizabeth 2003 Playing the Fields Messiaen Music and the Extramusical Ph D diss Chapel Hill The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Nelson David Lowell 1992 An Analysis of Olivier Messiaen s Chant Paraphrases 2 vols Ph D diss Evanston Northwestern University Ngim Alan Gerald 1997 Olivier Messiaen as a Pianist A Study of Tempo and Rhythm Based on His Recordings of Visions de l amen D M A diss Coral Gables University of Miami Peterson Larry Wayne 1973 Messiaen and Rhythm Theory and Practice Ph D diss Chapel Hill The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Puspita Amelia 2008 The Influence of Balinese Gamelan on the Music of Olivier Messiaen D M A diss Cincinnati University of Cincinnati Reverdy Michele 1988 L Œuvre pour orchestre d Olivier Messiaen Paris Alphonse Leduc ISBN 978 2 85689 038 7 Rischin Rebecca 2006 For the End of Time The Story of the Messiaen Quartet New ed Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 7297 8 Schultz Rob 2008 Melodic Contour and Nonretrogradable Structure in the Birdsong of Olivier Messiaen Music Theory Spectrum 30 no 1 Spring 89 137 Shenton Andrew 1998 The Unspoken Word Olivier Messiaen s langage communicable Ph D diss Cambridge Harvard University Shenton Andrew 2008 Olivier Messiaen s System of Signs Abingdon Oxon amp New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 7546 6168 9 Shenton Andrew ed 2010 Messiaen the Theologian Abingdon Oxon amp New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 7546 6640 0 Sholl Robert 2008 Messiaen Studies Cambridge amp New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 83981 5 Simeone Nigel 2004 Chez Messiaen tout est priere Messiaen s Appointment at the Trinite The Musical Times 145 no 1889 Winter 36 53 Simeone Nigel 2008 Messiaen Koussevitzky and the USA The Musical Times 149 no 1905 Winter 25 44 Waumsley Stuart 1975 The Organ Music of Olivier Messiaen New ed Paris Alphonse Leduc OCLC 2911308 LCCN 77 457244 Welsh Ibanez Deborah 2005 Color Timbre and Resonance Developments in Olivier Messiaen s Use of Percussion Between 1956 1965 D M A diss Coral Gables University of Miami Zheng Zhong 2004 A Study of Messiaen s Solo Piano Works Ph D diss Hong Kong The Chinese University of Hong Kong Films Edit Apparition of the Eternal Church Paul Festa s 2006 film about responses of 31 artists to Messiaen s music Messiaen at 80 1988 Directed by Sue Knussen 1 Olivier Messiaen et les oiseaux 1973 Directed by Michel Fano and Denise Tual Olivier Messiaen The Crystal Liturgy 2007 DVD release date Directed by Olivier Mille Olivier Messiaen Works 1991 DVD on which Messiaen performs Improvisations on the organ at the Paris Trinity Church The South Bank Show Olivier Messiaen The Music of Faith 1985 Directed by Alan Benson BFI database entry Quartet for the End of Time with the President s Own Marine Band Ensemble A Film by H Paul MoonExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Olivier Messiaen Wikiquote has quotations related to Olivier Messiaen Messiaen Olivier in Oxford Music Online by subscription BBC Messiaen Profile oliviermessiaen org Up to date website by Malcolm Ball includes the latest recordings and concerts a comprehensive bibliography photos analyses and reviews a very extensive bio of Yvonne Loriod with discography and more Infography about Olivier Messiaen oliviermessiaen net hosted by the Boston University Messiaen Project BUMP Includes detailed information on the composer s life and works events and links to other Messiaen websites www philharmonia co uk messiaen the Philharmonia Orchestra s Messiaen website The site contains articles unseen images programme notes and films to go alongside the orchestra s series of concerts celebrating the Centenary of Olivier Messiaen s birth Music for the End of Time David Schiff article in The Nation posted 25 January 2006 13 February 2006 issue Formally a review of Messiaen by Peter Hill and Nigel Simeone but provides an overview of Messiaen s life and works Music and the Holocaust Olivier Messiaen Olivier Messiaen biography works resources in French and English IRCAM My Messiaen Modes A visual representation of Messiaen s modes of limited transposition Listening Edit Louange a l immortalite de Jesus on YouTube played by Martina Trumpp violin and Bohumir Stehlik piano Theme et variations Helen Kim violin Adam Bowles piano Luna Nova New Music Ensemble Le merle noir John McMurtery flute Adam Bowles piano Luna Nova New Music Ensemble Quatuor pour la fin du temps Luna Nova New Music Ensemble Regard de l esprit de joie from Vingt regards Tom Poster pianist Example of Birdsong in Messiaen on YouTube played on a Muhleisen pipe organ In depth feature on Olivier Messiaen by Radio France International s English service Oiseaux exotiques on YouTube by Ukho Ensemble Kyiv Olivier Messiaen Le Banquet Celeste 1928 Andrew Pink 2021 Exordia ad missam Portals Biography Classical music France Opera BFI database entry Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Olivier Messiaen amp oldid 1151954323, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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