Diptyque
Scores
To import into forScore on iPad/iPhone: open a score, then tap Safari’s Share button → Copy to forScore. The score arrives tagged with its title and composer.
How to play
Historical context
Messiaen composed the Diptyque for organ in 1929–30, while he was still a student at the Paris Conservatoire, and dedicated it to his two teachers there, Paul Dukas and Marcel Dupré. He gave the first performance himself on 30 March 1930 at the Église de la Sainte-Trinité in Paris — the church where, the following year, he would become titular organist and remain for sixty-one years.
The work’s full subtitle, Essai sur la vie terrestre et l’éternité bienheureuse (essay on earthly life and blessed eternity), explains its two-panel “diptych” form: a turbulent, dissonant first part depicting earthly life with its useless agitations, which breaks off into a slow, luminous Paradis. That serene conclusion had a remarkable afterlife. As a prisoner of war at Stalag VIII-A in 1940, Messiaen reworked it from memory for violin and piano, transposed and greatly slowed, as the closing Louange à l’Immortalité de Jésus of his Quatuor pour la fin du temps.
Drawn from public reference sources (Wikipedia, standard organ-repertoire references).