Berlioz · Symphonie Fantastique (Movement 1)
Overview
1 min readLast updated November 2026
Table of contents
- Composer: Hector Berlioz, born 1803, France
- Influences: Beethoven (Classical → Romantic), Shakespeare
- Background:
- Self-taught, played guitar and flute, not a pianist
- Disregarded strict compositional rules [unclear: “didn’t care about the rules” – interpret as non-traditional technique]
- Inspiration:
- 1827: Attended Hamlet in Paris, impressed by Harriet Smithson (Ophelia)
- Obsessed with Smithson; sent letters for 3 years → wrote Symphonie fantastique
- Married Smithson 3 years later, later divorced
- Composition: 1830
- Programmatic focus:
- Story of a young artist in love [explicit from program notes]
- Idée fixe: fixed melody representing the beloved
- 40 bars, 32 dynamic markings
- Fragmented, distorted, sequenced – reflects changing psychological/emotional states
- Form: Sonata-influenced but flexible [ambiguous: “in sonata form but kinda not”]
Movements
- Rêveries—Passions
- A Ball (title uncertain)
- Shepherds’ dialogue (title uncertain)
- Opium/Fever Dream – idée fixe increasingly disjointed
- Witches’ Sabbath – grotesque, vulgar, witchlike
Musical Characteristics
- Melody: idée fixe recurs and transforms across movements
- Harmony & Tonality: Chromatic, dramatic, subordinate to programmatic intent
- Texture / Orchestration: Large orchestra; used operatically to convey narrative, emotion, character
- Rhythm / Tempo / Meter: Flexible; supports storytelling; includes dramatic contrasts, expressive pulses
- Dynamics: Detailed; expressive markings linked to narrative progression
- Emotional / Programmatic Notes:
- Rollercoaster of emotions: obsession, passion, disgust, isolation
- Symphonic storytelling mirrors an operatic episode in the artist’s life
Wider Listening
- Berlioz: Harold in Italy
- Tone poems by Liszt and Strauss
- Narrative orchestration, programmatic focus, emotional extremes
Notes on processing according to the prompt:
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