By BBC Music Magazine

Published: Wednesday, 20 December 2023 at 15:15 PM


The process by which Hector Berlioz’s image changed from that of a maverick on the margin of musical history to that of a great composer had various causes – but one crucial event. Historically, there were many reasons why he should have been misjudged.

Who was Berlioz?

He was a 19th-century composer whose lucid, linearly conceived orchestral music was impervious to the influence of that dominant 19th-century instrument, the piano and its all-important sustaining pedal.

An heir of Beethoven who wrote symphonies outside the Austro-German symphonic tradition, Berlioz treated harmony expressively rather than functionally. His style, against the current of the age, was based on extended melody and rhythmic irregularity. He was a revolutionary Romantic who had deep Classical roots and a passion for Gluck.

Such characteristics, along with the often formidable technical difficulty of his music, formed serious barriers to understanding him.

When was Berlioz born?

Hector Berlioz was born on 11 December 1803. He was the eldest child of Louis Berlioz (1776–1848), a physician, and his wife, Marie-Antoinette Joséphine (1784–1838).

Berlioz was born in La Côte-Saint-André, Isère, south-eastern France, not far from Grenoble.

What was Berlioz like?

Berlioz remained for a long time, for most people, disconcertingly strange, outlandish. It was easier to pigeonhole him as a writer who dabbled in composition, author of brilliant criticism and of an amusing if also disconcerting autobiography – that odd mixture of wild enthusiasm and caustic irony which is the Berlioz Memoirs.

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As a composer, Berlioz had to wait for a time when ‘all epochs are potentially equal, all styles admissible, one thing is no longer judged by another, and the only laws a piece of music must be true to are its own’. His music needed to become familiar. And it has done, thanks to much more frequent performance and the advent of the LP and CD.

When was the Berlioz revival?

One crucial event was the production of Les Troyens under Rafael Kubelík at Covent Garden in 1957. It was the first time that Berlioz’s culminating masterpiece had been seen anywhere as he conceived it, performed with only minor cuts on a single evening.