The Verset pour la fête de la Dédicace (French: Verset for the Festival of the Dedication of a Church) is a short composition for organ by French composer Olivier Messiaen. It was completed in 1960.
Background
The Verset was composed as a response to a commission by the Conservatoire de Paris. The piece would be used at the organ competitive examination which took place on June 13, 1961, at the Conservatoire.[1][2][3] It was completed in Paris in December 1960 and was premiered at the examination.[4] It was published that year by Éditions Alphonse Leduc.[3][5]
Structure
The piece is scored for solo organ and has a total duration of around 9 minutes. Messiaen used plainchant and birdsong extensively throughout the whole piece.
The Verset starts with a monodic theme entitled Alleluia de la Dédicace, which he also used in the second movement of his Méditations sur le mystère de la Sainte Trinité.[4] However, unlike in the Méditations, the melody has several chromatic changes,[2] turning it into an atonal melody. After presenting the main theme, he alternates different themes: the Alleluia, a consolation, and a supplication, a loud central section of the piece. Intersparsed between these sections are extended passages of birdsong. The song thrush is the only bird to be presented in the piece.[4][6][7]