Chapter 4: The Concerts,
pp. 99-101
Both famous nineteenth-century images of the Sunday concerts, one outside the
Conservatoire in the rue Bergère, one inside the Salle des Concerts,
evoke particulars of the atmosphere (following p. 378)> In the exterior view
a crowd is arriving before the outer portal of the Conservatoire. A carriage
drawn by white horses has paused to deliver an aristocratic amateur de musique.
It is a bright winter day: of those pressing forward on foot, the women wear
fur stoles and muffs, with the men in greatcoats and top hats. A foot-patrolman
stands before the carriage, with two mounted officers looking onmembers
of the staff required by the Préfecture de Police for public spectacles.
In the foreground, a couple and their child, perhaps on their Sunday promenade,
pause to observe the excitement. A photograph of perhaps 1874 (see website)
shows almost exactly the same scene from a different angle.
The excitement continues within. Fashionably dressed
women struggle to reach their seats in the narrow balcony; indeed the majority
of the recognizable figures are women. We have a good view of the loges
and the way the best of them give directly onto the performance force. The grand
chandeliers invite ones gaze. The room is packed.
The artist gives a decent approximation of the distribution
of orchestra and chorus, with the sharply rising bleachers for the winds and
a not-quite-accurate row of doublebasses at the top. The hemicycle can be seen
encircling the group. The chorus women are seated at the front of the stage;
at dead center of the aggregation, a conductor leads with his bow and a violin
soloist stands alongside to the left. This engraving comes from 1843, and thus
must suggest the concert of 29 January 1843, the only one that season with a
male violinistSivori. In that case the conductor is not Habeneck but Tilmant,
who substituted that day.
The disposition of the orchestra in choirs follows
Habenecks preference and is on the whole not dissimilar from modern configurations
with antiphonal violins. The seating plan published by Elwart shows the chorus
on the forestage separating violins I and II to the left and right. Violas complete
the box. On the tiers are cellos and double basses to the right, woodwinds and
brasses to the left, with trombone, ophicleide, timpani, and battery at the
top, along with a lone stand of contrabasses. Later there were alterations,
of course, but the photograph of Gaubert and the Société made
in the 1930s (following p. 378) shows essentially the same layout, though with
five risers, not four, for the winds and brass, and the cello section now opposite
the violins.
One of the intriguing components of Elwarts seating
plan is the way the front two stands of low strings each consist of a cellist
and a doublebassist, an arrangement also suggested by Berlioz in his orchestration
treatise and, for that matter, by the British tourists. This could only have
worked for the first couple of decades, where the prevailing repertoire could
be notated on a single cello-and-bass part. (Beethoven and Schubert begin to
treat the lines separately. Berlioz continues the emancipation of
the bass line, ordering separate parts for cellos and doublebasses from the
late 1830s, and in some respects it is surprising that he recommends the Sociétés
practice.) Having the principal desk of cellos so far from the conductor, and
the whole of the cello-and-bass section behind the violas, seems musically problematic,
however, and it was the one detail of historic practice that Roger
Norrington felt compelled to abandon in his Berlioz experiences
of the 1970s.
The other unusual feature of the disposition of performers
was, of course, to have the chorus surrounding the conductorand with the
basses separating the opposing violin sectionsin front of the orchestra.
The singers would wait offstage until their portion of the program, then occupy
benches much like those of the parterre level, with the strongest voices
on the forward bench of each section. Particular attention was paid to the appearance
of the women, who being in the direct line of public view, were to expected
to wear full-length supple gowns (robes de Mousseline) and gloves. In
April 1840 there was an incident over two women who ignored (or, they said by
way of apology, had not understood) the call for somber dress for the Good Friday
concert, appearing instead in long overcoats (spencers). Concern with
the deportment of the chorus, not only in matters of dress but also with regard
to tasteful taking and leaving of the stage and the seldom-observed rule of
silence in the wings, was a frequent feature of committee meetings.
Those who have tried the chorus-in-front arrangement
for such works as Beethovens Ninth and Berliozs Roméo
et JulietteBerlioz specifically advocates it in both the Observations
that precede the score and the Grand Traité dInstrumentationnaturally
admire the rich choral presence. But the need for the forward-most women and
tenors to turn away from the audience in order to see the conductor cannot have
seemed graceful, and the use of the chorusmaster to mirror the conductors
gestures was positively cumbersome.