Berlioz, Louis-Hector
concert operaThe Damnation of Faust (1846) met with failure in his lifetime but is now considered a masterpiece. Another dramatic work is the gigantic opera The Trojans, completed in 1858 but not performed in its entirety until 1890. It was successfully revived after 1920. The nonliturgical oratorio The Childhood of Christ, for which he also wrote the text, was completed in 1854, and it was performed with great success for almost a century.
Some of Berlioz's works are scored for large numbers of instruments, not only for volume but for richness of tone color even in delicate passages. His ideas of orchestration influenced many later composers. A passionate and impetuous man, Berlioz had several love affairs and was twice married, first to Harriet Smithson, an Irish actress. He was librarian at the Paris Conservatory and an incisive, witty, and urbane author whose writings include music criticism, essays on the arts, memoirs (tr. 1969; rev. ed., 2002), and the amusing Evenings with the Orchestra (tr. 1956). His treatise on instrumentation (1843) was widely recognized as a standard text.
See his letters, ed. by J. Barzun (1954); biographies by J. H. Elliot (rev. ed. 1967), J. Barzun (2 vol., 3d ed. 1969), and D. Cairns (2 vol., 2000); studies by E. Newman (1910, repr. 1969), T. S. Wotton (1935, repr. 1969), B. Primmer (1973), and K. Holoman (1990).
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