Te Deum (Berlioz)


The Te Deum by Hector Berlioz was completed in 1849. Like the earlier and more famous 'Grande Messe des Morts', it is one of the works referred to by Berlioz in his Memoirs as "the enormous compositions which some critics have called architectural or monumental music." While the orchestral forces required for the Te Deum are not as titanic as those of the Requiem, the work calls for an organ that can compete on equal terms with the rest of the orchestra. It lasts approximately fifty minutes and derives its text from the traditional Latin Te Deum, although Berlioz changed the word order for dramatic purposes.

Background and premiere

The Te Deum was originally conceived as the climax of a grand symphony celebrating Napoleon Bonaparte. The finished work was dedicated to Albert, Prince Consort, husband of Queen Victoria. Some of the material used by Berlioz in the piece was originally written for his Messe Solennelle of 1824, thought to have been destroyed by the composer but rediscovered in 1991. The first performance of the work was on 30 April 1855, at the Church of Saint-Eustache, Paris; Berlioz conducted an ensemble of 900 or 950 performers.

Structure

Orchestration

The choral movements of the Te Deum are scored for:
There are differences in the orchestration of the non-choral movements. The Prelude calls for a piccolo and 6 snare drums, while the March requires a piccolo saxhorn and 12 harps.

List of movements

Apart from the rarely performed or recorded orchestral Prelude and Marche pour la présentation aux drapeaux, there are six movements to this Te Deum, designated by Berlioz as either hymns or prayers, except for the last movement which he designated as both. These are listed below:
  1. Te Deum
  2. Tibi omnes
  3. Dignare
  4. Christe, Rex gloriae
  5. Te ergo quaesumus
  6. Judex crederis
When performed, the Prelude falls between the Tibi omnes and Dignare; the Marche usually comes after the Judex crederis.

Reception

After the first performance in London, in 1887 to celebrate Queen Victoria's Golden Jubilee, The Times commented:
Anton Bruckner, who wrote his own Te Deum in the early 1880s, criticised Berlioz's setting for being too secular, while Camille Saint-Saëns argued that it was well-suited for performance in church.
The second movement "Tibi Omnes" was performed by the Sydney Symphony Orchestra and the Sydney Philharmonia Choirs to accompany the lighting of the Olympic flame in the Opening Ceremony of the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, Australia.

Recordings

The recordings conducted by Eliahu Inbal and John Nelson include the two sections usually omitted: the Prelude and the Marche pour la présentation aux drapeaux'