Author Topic: Count Petofi and Comte de St.-Germain  (Read 3982 times)

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Offline Philippe Cordier

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Re:Count Petofi and Comte de St.-Germain
« Reply #15 on: February 19, 2003, 04:52:54 AM »
Wiley, thank you for sharing your information.

I am familiar with some of the resources you list. I have a 1-volume edition of Casanova's memoirs published by some university press a few years ago, and I have the alchemy book (very outdated info on St-Germain, though). All of the sources are referred to in the Fuller biography. Some were published a couple hundred years ago and may not have been reprinted, so they might be a bit difficult to obtain (maybe inter-library loan could get them :) ). I also have the biography by Isabel Cooper-Oakley, an early Theosophist. Her biography quotes extensively from contemporary letters and documents, although as noted earlier, many of these have proved to be fakes.

Over the weekend I skimmed through the Fuller biography and was convinced the noble man really was of noble blood. Then I re-read Butler's study in "The Myth of the Magus," which interprets the same documentary sources but to a very different end, completely convincing me that he was a fraud. Butler's source is Volz, which I wish I could get my hands on but I don't read German and it dates from before WWII.

It's too bad St. Germain's music is not more readily available. I have a tape from "L'Incostanza Delusa," an opera pastiche that he composed for, which I obtained either from the PRA or the Theosophical Society a few years ago. Unfortunately the recording quality wasn't very good, and coupled with my not very high end equipment, the quality seemed to degenerate further after I played it a couple of times. The music reminded me vaguely of Mozart, although not so complex and rather repetitive. Also, the music had been re-transcribed for solo piano rather than the string orchestra original. Still, it was fascinating to catch a glimpse (?) of this music--pleasant, but not something that would normally have outlived the time period. It would be fascinating if any of St. Germain's paintings had survived ... like the original Josette's music box, someone out there must have one, somewhere! Here again, though, the debunking-believer Fuller doubts that the Comte executed any paintings himself.

-Vlad, last scion of the UMN (Upper Midwestern/Nordic) branch of the Rockefeller family ;)
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Offline Philippe Cordier

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Re: Count Petofi and Comte de St.-Germain
« Reply #16 on: February 26, 2003, 01:42:38 AM »
And her essay includes a list of Saint-Germain's music that was available as of 1983, but not in the U.S.
Musique Raisonee
Six Sonatas for Two Violins with a Bass for the Harpsichord or Violencello
Seven Solos for a Violin

I used to play the violin, although that was 20 years ago.  I wish it were possible to see the music for Comte St.-Germain's violin solos.

The Philosophical Research Society published a facsimile of a few of his compositions, but there were severe shortcomings with what they presented. For example, they published the six sonatas for two violins, but the violin part was not included ... with no explanation, only the treble cleff (bass chord) was printed! So it was not possible for me to obtain any idea as to the violin part.

I know there have been at least three librarians on this forum.  If any of you are reading this, do you know if it's possible to somehow see any of this music?  If it hasn't been published (as it appears most of St.-Germain's music has not been), do ordinary people have any chance of seeing the scores, or copies of them?

My research indicates that the music for the violin solos is in the British Museum.

Many thanks for any possible input.

(Interesting how my involvement with this topic has played into my life in a number of ways.  For example, I was reminded that one of my grandfathers, who played in an orchestra, made arrangements and did some composing.  I know my mother has some of his sheet music, and I hope to look into this further.)

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Offline Philippe Cordier

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Re: Count Petofi and Comte de St.-Germain
« Reply #17 on: February 27, 2003, 01:19:48 AM »
they published the six sonatas for two violins, but the violin part was not included ... with no explanation, only the treble cleff (bass chord) was printed! So it was not possible for me to obtain any idea as to the violin part.

That didn't make a lot of sense, did it?  ::)

I really did play piano and violin for about 10 years, even if it seems I don't know a treble cleff from a bass cleff.  Well, it has been 20 years since I was involved with music -- but I think what I meant to say here was that the printed score was only of the bass cleff accompaniment; the violin part (treble cleff) was not printed.

Librarians?
Musicologists?

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Offline victoriawinters

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Re:Count Petofi and Comte de St.-Germain
« Reply #18 on: February 27, 2003, 10:08:49 AM »
It's too bad St. Germain's music is not more readily available.

Quote
I have a tape from "L'Incostanza Delusa," an opera pastiche that he composed for, which I obtained either from the PRA or the Theosophical Society a few years ago.

here is a quote from the grove dictionary of music and musicians:

"Saint Germain, Count of
(d Eckernfƒ¶rde, 27 Feb 1784). Courtier, adventurer, amateur scientist, inventor and dilettante musician. He purposely concealed his background and identity, and used such pseudonyms as Count Welldone, Prince Ragotzy, Count Bellamare and Count Surmont on his wide travels throughout Europe. Further confusion has arisen with the like-named French general Claude Louis de Saint Germain and with Robert-Franƒ§ois Quesnay de Saint Germain, an ardent occultist who may have written the essays La trƒ¨s sainte Trinosofie and La magie sainte (still used by Freemasons) that are attributed to the count. Gerber, alone among the many commentators on Saint Germain's life (which has many times been made the subject of fiction, by George Sand and Bulwer-Lytton for instance), maintained that he was identical with an obscure violinist and composer in Berlin named Giovannini, but this is improbable. Saint Germain was most likely either the son of Franz Leopold Rƒ¡kƒ³czi, exiled Prince of Transylvania, or the illegitimate son of Maria-Anna of Neubourg, widow of Charles II of Spain. In his youth he was probably a protege of the Grand Duke Gian Gastone (the last of the Medicis) and may have studied at Siena University. He appeared in London society from about 1743, and in 1758 was in Paris, where he became a favourite of Mme de Pompadour and Louis XV. After an embarrassing affair as an unofficial political agent in The Hague (1760) he returned briefly to England. Further travels took him to Russia, Germany and Italy; he visited Berlin at the invitation of Friedrich August of Brunswick, and in 1779 Prince Karl of Hesse, his last patron, gave him a building for his scientific experiments. He claimed to have made several discoveries applicable to manufacturing processes and was associated with industries in the Low Countries.

Most of Saint Germain's musical activities were associated with his visits to England, although his talent was also praised by the French courtiers. According to Burney, the ¢â‚¬Ëœcelebrated and mysterious' Count Saint Germain contributed several songs to the pasticcio L'incostanza delusa (1745) and attended its rehearsals with Prince Lobkowitz (to whom the libretto was dedicated); his ¢â‚¬ËœPer pietƒ  bell' idol mio' was encored nightly, but Burney considered the other songs in the published score insipid. Horace Walpole, who claimed that the count had been in England for about two years by December 1745, described him as follows: ¢â‚¬ËœHe sings, plays on the violin wonderfully, composes, is mad and not very sensible'. He published in London several sentimental English songs, a collection of 42 Italian arias (Musique raisonnee) and a book each of trio sonatas and solo violin sonatas. The aria collection includes the three from L'incostanza delusa; texts and music range from unpretentious idylls to intense dramas, all with considerable emphasis on accurate text rendering. His trio sonatas combine polyphonic and homophonic styles, but the violin sonatas are more Rococo in character.

WORKS
Vocal: Gentle love this hour befriend me, song (London, c1745); 3 arias for L'incostanza delusa (pasticcio), London, 1745, in Favourite Songs (London, c1745); The maid that's made for love and me, song, in London Magazine (1747), 46-7 [also pubd as Oh wouldst thou know what kind of charms, Gentleman's Magazine, xvii (1747), 441, and with new text in The Summer's Tale (pasticcio) (London, 1765)]; Jove, when he saw my Fanny's face, song, in Gentleman's Magazine, xviii (1748), 372; Musique raisonnee selon le bon sens aux dames angloises qui aiment le vrai goƒ»t en cet art, insts (London, c1750); The Self Banish'd, song (London, ?1750)
Inst: 6 Sonatas, 2 vn, bc (London, c1750); 7 Solos, vn, bc (London, c1758)

BIBLIOGRAPHY
BurneyH
GerberNL
E.M. Oettinger: Graf St. Germain (Leipzig, 1846)
L. Wraxall: Remarkable Adventurers and Unrevealed Mysteries (London, 1863)
I.C. Oakley: The Comte de St.-Germain: the Secret of Kings (Milan, 1912, 2/1927/R)
G.B. Volz: Der Graf von Saint-Germain (Dresden, 1923)
A.E. Waite: ¢â‚¬ËœComte de Saint-Germain as an Historical Personality', Occult Review, xxxvii (1923), 219
P. Chacornac: Le Comte de Saint-Germain (Paris, 1947/R)
J. Franco: ¢â‚¬ËœThe Count of St. Germain', MQ, xxxvi (1950), 540-50
W.S. Lewis and others, eds.: The Yale Edition of Horace Walpole's Correspondence, xix (New Haven, CT, 1955), 181 only
J.H. Calmeyer: ¢â‚¬ËœThe Count of Saint Germain or Giovannini: a Case of Mistaken Identity', ML, xlviii (1967), 4-16
J.O. Fuller: The Comte de Saint-Germain (London, 1988)
J.H. CALMEYER"

no wonder i couldn't find him right off.  i didn't understand what some of you were saying lol... musiquee rasionee is a type of french music style, not a name of a work and it's opera pasticco not opera pastische!  also the opera's name, L'incostanza delusa was written by Josef Haydn.   a not a very original guy if he's involved in pasticco (it means pie or patchwork, in other words his arias would be with someother more famous composer's work and it would end up on london as the last stop.)   lol.....

as far your recordings go, it looks like you are stuck with what you have as it doesn't list any of the recordings available.  you are lucky to even to have that recording!  he is a pretty obsure guy in the world of musicology.  but it does give further biographical references so goodie i hope i helped find out more information for those that are interested in reading further.

Offline Philippe Cordier

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Re:Count Petofi and Comte de St.-Germain
« Reply #19 on: March 04, 2003, 04:49:48 AM »

no wonder i couldn't find him right off.  i didn't understand what some of you were saying lol... musiquee rasionee is a type of french music style, not a name of a work and it's opera pasticco not opera pastische!  also the opera's name, L'incostanza delusa was written by Josef Haydn.   a not a very original guy if he's involved in pasticco (it means pie or patchwork, in other words his arias would be with someother more famous composer's work and it would end up on london as the last stop.)

VictoriaWinters,

Thank you for sharing your musical knowledge (and for your IM providing more details about conducting a music search on obscure works)!

After reading your comments here, I checked with the Overton-Fuller biography I mentioned. She has fairly detailed information on St.-Germain's music -- probably one of the better chapters in her book, though she writes more as an amateur researcher than a professional historian.

"Musique Raisonnee" may be a type of music, as you say, but sources indicate that this is the actual title of one of St.-Germain's compositions. The full title of the work is lengthy, but it begins:  "Musique Raisonnee selon le bon sens."  A copy of the original score is in a museum in Prague.

According to Overton-Fuller, "L'Inconstanza delusa" was an opera by Giuseppe Ferdinando Brivio. It was possibly at Brivio's invitation that St.-Germain composed several additional arias for the opera's London performances. English music historian of the time Burney designated it as a pasticcio, but this appellation is questioned by Overton-Fuller.

Other than the opera, it appears that the majority of St.-Germain's other music was performed in drawing rooms and salons.

........................

Since my original post, I came across an entry for St.-Germain in the Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology. Their entry raises even more questions, concluding that St. Germain was a Porteguese Jew, not a Hungarian/Transylvanian Count brought up in the household of the Medicis.  Interestingly, they do not list the Overton-Fuller biography as a source -- but they do list Elizabeth Clare Prophet ...  ::)

This entry also debunks St. Germain's great age, giving him a more reasonable death at age 70, as opposed to Overton-Fuller, who has him born about 25 years earlier (which is necessary to fit with her theory that he was the last scion of the House of Racozsy.


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Offline victoriawinters

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Re:Count Petofi and Comte de St.-Germain
« Reply #20 on: March 04, 2003, 07:44:20 AM »

"Musique Raisonnee" may be a type of music, as you say, but sources indicate that this is the actual title of one of St.-Germain's compositions.

i stand corrected, see entry above.  but it is also a style or musical idea of somekind.  no time to do more research here on this point and was more fansinated by below....

Quote
According to Overton-Fuller, "L'Inconstanza delusa" was an opera by Giuseppe Ferdinando Brivio. It was possibly at Brivio's invitation that St.-Germain composed several additional arias for the opera's London performances. English music historian of the time Burney designated it as a pasticcio, but this appellation is questioned by Overton-Fuller.

looked up maestro brivio for you and found out he was an opera composer and impresario* from milan with dates of ? to ?ca. 1758.   (it happens churches burn, documents lost, etc. - he'd actually make a great time travel character.  lol!)  so he matches the count as far as being a contemporary.  now dig this part.   the opera "L'Inconstanza delusa" did have a setting composed by him in 1739? (Milan where he was voice teacher and impresario) with two arias tacked on for london 1745, the same year as the count's above-mentioned.  it's not unusual to have multiple composers set the same titles of operas, so yes haydn (1732-1809) did his version as well but just later.  search orfeo someday.

now i'm looking in mr. grout's the "short history of opera" and it says that there were two types of pasticcos.  this one falls into the later definition wherein eg., someone wrote an opera.  (in this case, brivio.)  the opera starts generally in italy but could also be in france (lully, etal.) or maybe germany but mozart hasn't hit the scene yet. (1756-1791).  now handel was in london from around 1712, via the long way around from hamburg and italy, had stopped composing operas and turned to oratorios around 1738-1741.  so big void in london for operas in 1745.  (an aside of historical context.)

so back to our story, "L'Inconstanza delusa" would have traveled around from place to place to place and finally would have landed in london (the normal last destination).  the opera would have undergone patching and alteration, mainly by it's original composer.  because this was the time of "opera by the numbers,"  each aria, chorus, etal. stood as a separate composition within the whole of the work and could easily be altered by the original composer or another composer.  arias cut, arias added, you get the gest.  it's not until post-mozart that opera by the numbers became through composed in nature.

as above noted in the grove entry, it says the count wrote three arias for the 1745 london and in my lastest research brivio wrote 2 for 1745 london.  new grove also states that there is no evidence that brivio was actually in london in 1745.  normally, you can tell by the scores of the composer (observing the watermarks or by their letters, newpaper accounts or other people's letters, bills, etc.) where they were and this is what is meant by that statement.

an opera is not made by three to five arias.  never was, never has been.  therefore, what i conjecture is that the count was in london, the production of this opera gets to london in 1745 along with brivio's extra arias quite possible along with a voice student of brivio's.  the count writes the three he did and voila the pasticcio or london version of 1745.  the newer arias would have replaced the original probably at the beginning and ending of the acts as per mr. grout's explaination.

so, the work i pasted together here is supporting the pasticco and not any other form or type of opera.  it's not intended in any way a put down of the composition(s).  they didn't have the same ideas about copyright that we do.  neither did they have the same ideas about music drama until maestro christophe gluck came around a bit later and reformed the entire mess it had become.  maestro gluck's ideal was that the lyric was not to be overwhelmed by the vocal gymnastics that opera at this particular point in time had become.  additionally, the audience of london was different then anywhere else and it required different elements for an opera to be successful there.  thus, the pasticco designation is not at all surprising.

_______________________
mr. charles burney was the originator of what would become the "new grove dictionary of music and musicians" which was recently completed overhauled by the good people working in london taking into account newly discovered information since it's last reprint in the 1970s.  so we will probably see him in many entries or most of them as one of the bibiliographic sources of the older entries.
______________________

*an impresario is a more or less a producer of opera.
______________________

Quote
Other than the opera, it appears that the majority of St.-Germain's other music was performed in drawing rooms and salons.

this would have been the modus operandi of the day with no real public or government support of the arts in place at this point.  the aristocracy would have been the main patron of music at the time.   the salon was also very popular in beethoven's and schubert's day and where they were able to earn a day to day living.   also, no TV, recordings or radio.  it was all live and no other way to hear music other then in your head.

this could be re-worked into a really fantastic fan fict. story using the mystry of count st. germain along with varying ideals borrowed from music mythology. (i noticed our count petofi reading his music score very intently while "air" conducting in a recent epi.)  in mythology and greek ideals going back to plato, music has the ability to heal or even influence the gods, namely pluto of the underworld into releasing a dead person.  (see myth of orfeo, king david of the bible, etal.)  but that is another lecture all together lol!

thus ends today's opera hour.

victoriawinters

Offline Philippe Cordier

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Re:Count Petofi and Comte de St.-Germain
« Reply #21 on: March 06, 2003, 04:48:10 AM »
Victoria Winters, I can't tell you how excited I was to read your post! I do hope we don't get the plug pulled on us for straying so far off-topic  ;D but I have several comments to make and some of them will relate directly back to DS -- if I can remember everything as I type this!

First, all of this information about opera and music can be seen as relating to Count Petofi, since we have seen that music is one of his passions.

I would agree from what you describe (and also from what Fuller's book on St.-Germain says) that the London production of "L'Inconstanza delusa" had become a pasticcio.

I don't mean to fault Overton-Fuller too much. Anyone interested in St.-Germain must be indebted to her dogged research (if they can plow through her idiosyncratic writing). The Philosophical Society, which published some of the sheet music (see my earlier post) did not provide any of this context.  In fact, they reprint six arias from what they incorrectly call "St. Germain's opera," but my further study of Overton indicates that St.-Germain only wrote three of these! See what I mean about the difficulties of finding accurate information about St.-Germain?

what i conjecture is that the count was in london, the production of this opera gets to london in 1745 along with brivio's extra arias quite possible along with a voice student of brivio's.

If you are suggesting that St.-Germain might have been a music student of Brivio's -- that is an absolutely brilliant deduction!

Fuller comments in her book that St.-Germain likely received his music education when he supposedly was brought up in the household of the Medicis in Italy. However, she is taking the Comte at his word -- others are more skeptical that he was "brought up in the household of the Medicis."

Quote
also, no TV, recordings or radio.  it was all live and no other way to hear music other then in your head.

Good point. We take the availability of music for granted, not thinking how what we today call "classical" music must have been the domain of the aristocracy and gentry ...

Quote
this could be re-worked into a really fantastic fan fict. story using the mystry of count st. germain along with varying ideals borrowed from music mythology. (i noticed our count petofi reading his music score very intently while "air" conducting in a recent epi.)  in mythology and greek ideals going back to plato, music has the ability to heal or even influence the gods, namely pluto of the underworld into releasing a dead person.  (see myth of orfeo, king david of the bible, etal.)

We are thinking on the same lines then. In a different thread (?) I recently referred to my unfinished Angelique story. To my thinking, Angelique (or Miranda duVal, rather), left the American colonies for Europe. France, specifically. Coincidentally, the time line happens to be during the reign of Louis XV -- whose court St.-Germain was then dazzling. Miranda changed her name to Angelique in France. In fact, I believe there may have been a French revolutionary with the last name of Angelique. I don't want to give more of my story away ... (Including my rather unique idea about Angelique's original nationality.)

...

Finally, I am in the process of translating a metaphysical poem by St.-Germain. I have about 80 percent of it translated but would like to ask the assistance of any interested party knowledgeable of the French language for assistance with half a dozen French words and phrases.  (The real difficulty is finding a way to express things in English, not the word-for-word translation, though it's the latter that I am requesting some help with.)

-Vlad

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Offline victoriawinters

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Re:Count Petofi and Comte de St.-Germain
« Reply #22 on: March 06, 2003, 08:57:55 AM »
i hope no plugs are going to be pulled!  i've rather enjoyed our meeting of the minds.  and, of course, it delights me to no end to share about my subject field, opera! ;D

i believe the topic of music is directly related to dark shadows.  try to imagine the impact the drama of dark shadows would have for us without robert colbert's haunting music!  i, for one, would find it oftentimes hard to see it working without it.  quentin with no shadows of the night?

back to more discussion re st. germain................
_______________________________________

the involvement of st. germain with louis xv was certainly historical fact from all that you and i have found.  louis xiv (i mean him-xiv) was a huge patron of the opera form.

while i wasn't really wasn't indicating that st. germain was a student of brivio's, it is certainly a possibility.  it is also a distinct possibility that st. germain may have been a singer and performed his own work at the salons of the day.  milan (brivio's location) was a huge opera center and still is today with the teatro la scala.  (la scala wasn't there in 1745 but the teatro duca was.)

certainly, the medici's were huge patrons of the arts.  florence is the literal birthplace of opera.  the big wedding of henri iv of france and marie de' medici in 1600 was marked by the performance of the first surviving extant opera, euridice by peri & caccini.  in tow to this wedding would have been the duke of mantua with his maestro di cappella, claudio monteverdi, the father of opera.  he took the experimental form and developed it to it's maturity.  the rest they say is history 300 plus years later.

as far as finding really acurate information about anyone particularly in the music field, that is oftentimes a crap shoot.  fires were a big problem! records destroyed or lost.  yikes!  we are also finding that good scholarship goes a long way to providing some needed answers but sometimes you just run into dead ends.  or you can get really lucky like the musicology dude who went to st. mark's in venice searching the gabrieli's and finding monteverdi's work!  (monteverdi was posted there after the death of the duke of mantua.)

the count also seems an elusive guy, posing more difficulties in reseach. moving from place to place.  sort of like our dear petofi.  and with all the records burning off from time to time he could have really been anyone or copied anyone without reproach.

petofi's character i think utilizes music for both his own pleasure or could potentially use it as a source of evil.  i am about a week behind on my episodes, but am fansinated to see what the writers will eventually do with his character.  i love to hate him!

as for the french, translation is no longer my bag.  i've left the word by word business to others.  lol!

this has certainly been a fasinating discussion for me and i'm looking forward to seeing your work when you have it finished.  i think throwing angelique into this mix of music and intrigue will be quite a fanisinating read.  since midnite, dom and MB do not allow posting of such work, please announce to the group your url of where you are keeping it.

thanks much.

Offline Luciaphile

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Re:Count Petofi and Comte de St.-Germain
« Reply #23 on: March 06, 2003, 03:24:39 PM »
I have nothing substantive to add. Just wanted to say that this exchange was wonderful to read. I know very little about music and had never even thought to look in Grove for the Comte. You've added to my appreciation quite a bit!

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Offline Happybat

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Re:Count Petofi and Comte de St.-Germain
« Reply #24 on: March 06, 2003, 03:25:32 PM »


In a different thread (?) I recently referred to my unfinished Angelique story. To my thinking, Angelique (or Miranda duVal, rather), left the American colonies for Europe. France, specifically. Coincidentally, the time line happens to be during the reign of Louis XV -- whose court St.-Germain was then dazzling. Miranda changed her name to Angelique in France. In fact, I believe there may have been a French revolutionary with the last name of Angelique. I don't want to give more of my story away ... (Including my rather unique idea about Angelique's original nationality.)

...

-Vlad

Vlad,

That sounds absolutely fascinating and I hope to see it, too, one day.  The art, culture, and yes, fashions of the 18th century have always intrigued me.

And I thought I know a little about classical music, but you and victoriawinters have blown me away with your knowledge of such esoteric musical matters!

Moving away from St. Germain and Brivio, whom I've never even heard of before, I wonder why the DS writers/producers had Petofi looking at the score of Berlioz's "Harold in Italy".  Wouldn't "Symphonie Fantastique" have been an even better choice?  Did DS ever use a movement from this same piece?  Maybe my memory is just playing tricks on me.  Anyway, drug-induced hallucinations, a haunting theme repeated over and over, hellfire and brimstone - it would be a natural for Dark Shadows, don't you think?    ;)
Happybat

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Offline victoriawinters

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Re:Count Petofi and Comte de St.-Germain
« Reply #25 on: March 06, 2003, 07:08:15 PM »
And I thought I know a little about classical music, but you and victoriawinters have blown me away with your knowledge of such esoteric musical matters!

Thank you Happy Bat.

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Moving away from St. Germain and Brivio, whom I've never even heard of before, I wonder why the DS writers/producers had Petofi looking at the score of Berlioz's "Harold in Italy".  Wouldn't "Symphonie Fantastique" have been an even better choice?  Did DS ever use a movement from this same piece?  Maybe my memory is just playing tricks on me.  Anyway, drug-induced hallucinations, a haunting theme repeated over and over, hellfire and brimstone - it would be a natural for Dark Shadows, don't you think?    ;)

Either score would make a great choice.  They both have weird elements.  Berlioz is known for his orchestration and his unusual mix of instruments together.  He uses an odd mix of instruments such as flutes and trombones playing dissonant notes in the Requiem.  He just has that way of making anything sound like hell.

But I do agree that the Witches Sabbath (Symphony Phantastic) movement would fit just lovely into our favorite daily drama.  lol!!!!!!

Offline Raineypark

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Re:Count Petofi and Comte de St.-Germain
« Reply #26 on: March 06, 2003, 08:40:22 PM »
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  But I do agree that the Witches Sabbath (Symphony Phantastic) movement would fit just lovely into our favorite daily drama.  lol!!!!!!

What a wonderful thread!  We've had long discourses on books and films...but I don't recall one like this on Classical music.

Now, someone, PLEASE give me the Title and Artist of a CD where I can hear "Symphony Phantastic"!!

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Re:Count Petofi and Comte de St.-Germain
« Reply #27 on: March 06, 2003, 08:49:10 PM »
Hi Raineypark,

If you go to CD Now or whatever, and type in "Symphonie Fantastique" (making sure you've got the Classical Music search engine turned on), the computer will tell you about cartloads of recordings of this work by Hector Berlioz.  It is what we used to call "one of the warhorses."

I hope you are managing to avoid the latest incursion of SNOW we are getting dumped with here in Boston.

Witchy and fantastic regards,

Steve

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Re:Count Petofi and Comte de St.-Germain
« Reply #28 on: March 06, 2003, 09:23:45 PM »
Thank you Steve.  Tho I hope there aren't TOO many choices....otherwise I'm still going to need a reccomendation before I purchase one particular version!  I went through quite a few versions of Antonin Dvorak's "Symphony for the New World" before I found the one I liked!

Escape the snow?  No, we did not escape the snow.  There IS no escaping the snow anymore.  I keep wondering when they moved Long Island to the place where Caribou, Maine used to be!  ::)

rainey
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Offline Philippe Cordier

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Re:Count Petofi and Comte de St.-Germain
« Reply #29 on: March 07, 2003, 04:25:01 AM »
Whew! There's so much to respond to here with everyone's posts!

the involvement of st. germain with louis xv was certainly historical fact from all that you and i have found.

This is very outside info and I'm not even sure I should be mentioning it, but I can't resist -- someone in my family owns a clock that was owned by Louis XV, made by his royal clockmaker.  I don't even dare describe it in detail, because this is a priceless museum piece -- one of the loveliest items I've ever seen outside Versailles itself ... I've seen it several times and it could help inspire the story I've mentioned writing ...


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while i wasn't really wasn't indicating that st. germain was a student of brivio's, it is certainly a possibility.  it is also a distinct possibility that st. germain may have been a singer and performed his own work at the salons of the day.  milan (brivio's location) was a huge opera center and still is today with the teatro la scala.


The reason your idea excited me so much is because Fuller quotes an authority on music whom she asked to examine photostats of St.-Germain's music, and one expert commented that the arias might have been composed as exercises undertaken during musical studies ... Also, St.-Germain was said to be a singer as well as violinist. There are huge gaps in the record of his whereabouts, often a dozen years at a time, when he really could have been anywhere, so he could easily have been a student of Brivio's in Italy.


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the count also seems an elusive guy, posing more difficulties in reseach. moving from place to place.  sort of like our dear petofi.  and with all the records burning off from time to time he could have really been anyone or copied anyone without reproach.

Another helpful insight -- thank you.


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petofi's character i think utilizes music for both his own pleasure or could potentially use it as a source of evil.  i am about a week behind on my episodes, but am fansinated to see what the writers will eventually do with his character.

Excellent use of Hungarian folk music in today's ep, when Petofi is under a gypsy tribunal (sorry, hope that's not too much of a spoiler!)


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i'm looking forward to seeing your work when you have it finished.  i think throwing angelique into this mix of music and intrigue will be quite a fanisinating read.

I'm looking forward to seeing it done, too.  ;D Sorry to say, though, it has been a couple of years since I started this story, and I honestly don't know when I'll get back to it. The comments in this thread are inspiring me, though.  But I do have another story that was much closer to completion that I should finish first.

If anyone who has knowledge of literary French does have an interest and the time, please IM me. I would just e-mail you about 6 - 10 words or phrases. My knowledge of French is elementary, but the harder part would be trying to recreate something of the sound of the original, rhyme scheme, etc. I somehow translated several Petrarchan (Italian) sonnets in graduate school using my knowledge of Spanish, and they came out surprisingly well.

RE: Berlioz's music.  I'm glad to be informed about this, too. I'm not familiar with the work and probably couldn't identify Berlioz by hearing. (OT-- my favorite composers are Bach, Vivaldi, and Heinichen -- I can usually identify them accurately ... and Mozart and Beethoven, too. And of course Debussy, Chopin and others would be my second favorite era, though I'm not very knowledgeable about time periods, classifications of music, etc.  I undertook a study of Mozart's late symphonic scores at one time and got to know those quite intimately -- though Mozart is not my favorite composer by any means.  Most beautiful piece I can think of:  Alegri's Miserere; though I think Andrew Lloyd Weber's Requiem is nearly as wonderful.)

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