[Musical Memories by Camille Saint-Saens]@TWC D-Link bookMusical Memories CHAPTER XII 2/16
Disagreements separated us, and I had had no relation with the society for a number of years when they asked me to take part in this festival.
A refusal would have been misunderstood and I had to accept, although the idea of performing at my age alongside such _virtuosi_ as Risler, Busoni, and Friedheim, in the height of their talent, was not encouraging. The festival lasted four days and there were six concerts--four with the orchestra and a chorus.
They gave the oratorio _Christus_, an enormous work which takes up all the time allowed for one concert; the Dante and Faust symphonies, and the symphonic poems _Ce qu'on entend sur la montagne_ and _Tasso_, to mention only the most important works. The oratorio _Christus_ lacks the fine unity of the _Saint Elisabeth_. But the two works are alike in being divided into a series of separate episodes.
While the different episodes in _Saint Elisabeth_ solve the difficult problem of creating variety and retaining unity, the parts of _Christus_ are somewhat unrelated.
There is something for every taste. Certain parts are unqualifiedly admirable; others border on the theatrical; still others are nearly or entirely liturgical, while, finally, some are picturesque, although there are some almost confusing. Like Gounod, Liszt was sometimes deceived and attributed to ordinary and simple sequences of chords a profound significance which escaped the great majority of his hearers.
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