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La Transfiguration de Notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ ("The Transfiguration of Our Lord Jesus Christ") is an oratorio written between 1965 and 1969[1] by Olivier Messiaen. Based on the account found in the synoptic gospels of Jesus' transfiguration, its writing is on a colossal scale, requiring around two-hundred performers. The forces required include a mixed choir, seven instrumental soloists and a large orchestra; only being surpassed by his opera Saint François d'Assise.
On hearing "an old priest deliver a sermon on the light and the filiation",[2] Messiaen began ruminating on the transfiguration story in the 1940s. By the time he began to write the music, he had not composed vocal music for seventeen years, since his solo choral work Cinq rechants. Warmer tonal harmonies reappeared in this work, in contrast to the harmonies he had been using for other works of the period.
Messiaen makes extensive use of birdsong throughout the piece, including the songs of the greater honeyguide, Alpine chough, accentor, superb starling, Baltimore oriole, rock thrush, blue mockingbird and peregrine falcon.[3]
The world première was directed by Serge Baudo on 7 June 1969 in Lisbon, Portugal. The American premiere was held from the 27th till 30th of March 1972 in Washington, D.C. with the National Symphony Orchestra and the Westminster Choir; Antal Dorati was the conductor. Dorati conducted the same forces for Decca Records in a recording one month later.[4]
The US West Coast première[5][6] was in 1981 in San Francisco, California, with the Berkeley Symphony and the Contra Costa Chorale under the direction of Kent Nagano. Preparation for this performance was supervised by Messiaen himself.
The music is divided into 14 movements, grouped into two septénaires (sets of seven), for about one and a half hours. The texts are largely derived from the Bible, particularly Matthew's account of the Transfiguration. Also included are some parts of Thomas Aquinas's Summa Theologica.
First Septenary
Second Septenary
The oratorio is scored for a mixed choir (ten voices per part), seven instrumental soloists, and a massive orchestra.[7]
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