3 Jeanne Demessieux as Organist of St-Esprit during the period 1933-1944

This morning, I accompanied both masses,
at 10:00 and at 11:30.
This was the last time before summer vacation.
—Diary entry of July 8, 1934

This chapter focuses on Demessieux’s first decade as titular organist of St-Esprit. In total, she served for 29 years, until 1962, when she accepted the titular organist’s position at La Madeleine.

Thirty years earlier, when the Demessieux family moved into Paris’s twelfth arrondissement in the autumn of 1932, a new Catholic parish was in the process of being established in their neighbourhood. Named Église du St-Esprit (Church of the Holy Spirit), its building at the corner of rue Cannebière and avenue Daumesnil had been under construction since 1928.1 In 1933, twelve-year-old Jeanne Demessieux—because she played the piano and lived in the vicinity of St-Esprit—was called to play for its services.2 The building’s sanctuary then still under construction, services were being held in the crypt of the church, and the instrument she played there was a harmonium.3 Meanwhile in 1933, two organs were planned for the new church: a grand orgue (great organ) and an orgue de chœur (choir organ).4 Their designs were by the organist-composer Albert Alain (1880–1971), father of the famous Jehan Alain.5

The organ of St-Esprit

When the sanctuary of St-Esprit opened in 1934, a side gallery contained the planned orgue de chœur, constructed that year by the firm Gloton-Debierre.6 It had fourteen stops distributed over two manuals, two pedal stops derived from manual I, and electric action. Due to a lack of funds, the grand orgue that had been designed to deliver the full range of organ music appropriate to worship services was never built, however. As will be shown later in this chapter, Demessieux served St-Esprit by performing not only music suited to an organ of limited resources, but also repertoire meant for a three-manual organ with independent pedal.

The St-Esprit organ’s original specification was:7

Manual I Manual II Pedal
(borrowed from G-O)
Grand-Orgue Récit
(C2–G6) (C2–G6) (C2–F4)
Bourdon 16* Cor de nuit 8 Soubasse 16
Montre   8 Gambe 8 Basse   8
Flûte harmonique   8 Voix céleste
Bourdon   8 Octave 4 Couplers:†
Prestant   4 Nasard 22/3 II/I (16 and 8)
Plein jeu
(3 ranks)‡
I/Ped., II/Ped.
Bombarde 16 Other controls:◊
Trompette   8 Récit under expression
Clairon   4 Reeds on and off
* For readers unfamiliar with the terminology of organ stops, the number beside each stop name indicates pipe length in feet (though not necessarily literal feet) and designates the pitch level at which the stop sounds: 16 indicates an octave lower than notated pitch, 8 indicates unison, 4 indicates the octave above, and so on. A fractional number such as 22/3, indicates a non-octave or -unison sound, in this case one octave and a fifth above notated pitch; such stops are called “mutations.”
† A “coupler” allows stops drawn on a manual division of the organ to sound when another division (manual or pedal) is played. For example, II/I indicates that stops drawn on manual II are made to sound when manual I is played. The division upon which one is playing may or may not have stops of its own drawn.
‡ A “rank” is a set of pipes at one pitch level, normally a pipe for each key on its associated manual (or for each pedal of the pedalboard). Here, on manual II, “Plein jeu (3 ranks)” indicates a stop that involves three ranks of pipes, each at a different pitch level, including at least one mutation; such a stop is called a “mixture.” The Plein jeu of the St-Esprit organ likely consisted of ranks at 2-foot, 11/3-foot, and 1-foot pitch levels.
◊ “Under expression” means that the named division of the organ (here, manual II) is enclosed in a box that has louvred shades that may be gradually opened or closed with a foot-operated control to gradually increase or decrease the volume of sound. “Reeds on or off” is a control that when engaged (or disengaged) brings on (or turns off) all the reed stops—on this organ, manual II’s Bombarde 16, Trompette 8, and Clairon 4.

The firm that built the organ, Gloton-Debierre, had been headed since 1919 by Georges Gloton. In an article describing organ building in 1930s Paris, Marc Hedelin singled out Georges Gloton for the quality of his instruments and the St-Esprit organ as an example of their excellence.8 Hedelin also pointed to this organ’s mixture stop (the 3-rank Plein jeu) as an instance of the growing importance of mixtures in organ building in twentieth-century France, and to placement of the mixture on the Récit rather than on the manual called Grand-Orgue, as typical of medium-size Paris organs of that decade.9

The choices of stops for the St-Esprit organ arguably bear a resemblance to those of the most famous organ designed by Albert Alain, the instrument that, beginning in 1910, he gradually built for his home. In its original plan, Alain’s organ had three manuals—Grand-Orgue, Positif, and Récitand an independent Pedal division. The following chart compares the specification of the St-Esprit organ with that of Alain’s home organ as originally designed by indicating correspondences in green.

Original Plan of Albert Alain’s home organ (begun 1910)*
Manual I Manual II
Grand-Orgue Positif
Bourdon 16 Salicional 8
Montre   8 Cor de nuit 8
Flûte harmonique   8
Flûte douce
4
Prestant   4
Nasard
22/3
   Quarte de Nasard 2
Tierce (upper) 13/5
Basson-Hautbois 8
Pedal [independent] Manual III
Récit
Soubasse 16 Flûte 8
Basse   8 Viole de Gambe 8
Flûte   4
Voix céleste
8
Salicet

or

Flûte octave
4
Plein jeu (3 ranks)
Trompette 8
 
* Specification of Albert Alain organ from Linda Dzuris, “Six French organs and the registration indications in L’Œuvre d’orgue de Jehan Alain,” The Diapason, whole number 1047 (June 1999): 16.

 

A comparison of the two instruments reveals that, in all, ten of the fourteen stops chosen for the St-Esprit organ were also included in the original plan of Albert Alain’s home organ. Specifically, manual I of the St-Esprit organ is identical in its make-up to that of Alain’s home organ, except that it features an additional 8-foot stop. Manual II of the St-Esprit instrument, like manual II of Alain’s home organ, has a Cor de nuit 8 and a Nasard 22/3. Manual II of the St-Esprit organ also boasts, like manual III of Alain’s home organ, two string stops (Gambe and Voix céleste), a 3-rank Plein jeu, and a Trompette 8.

Among stops missing from the St-Esprit instrument are the independent pedal stops and two features of the upperwork on manual II of Alain’s home organ—the latter being the 2-foot stop and the 13/5-foot mutation.10 A 2-foot stop would have added further clarity to a polyphonic texture. A 13/5-foot mutation (a Tierce in French) would have served to add color to a combination of other stops, thereby producing the effect of a solo stop sometimes called for in the registration of French Baroque organ music.11

Notable additions to the St-Esprit organ are reed stops at 16-foot and 4-foot pitch levels, joining the Trompette 8—these stops could add power to a homophonic texture.

Lacking independent stops for its pedal division and lacking on manual I a complete principal chorus (stops at all pitch levels), the St-Esprit organ was, from a present-day point of view, more suited to performing homophonic than polyphonic music, that is, more suited to Romantic-era than Baroque-era music. For performance of nineteenth-century repertoire, Demessieux could choose from the following:

1) manual I’s three 8-foot ranks and one 4-foot rank, which together create the French-Romantic registration called fonds.

2) manual II “under expression,” enabling decrescendo and crescendo.

3) a choice of quiet 8-foot stops on manual II. Specifically, Demessieux could select from either of two string stops for homophonic music (Gambe or Voix céleste), or a quiet foundation stop having somewhat of a horn sound (Cor de nuit) that could serve either as a solo or accompanying stop.

For performance of a polyphonic piece by Bach, Demessieux could have created a principal chorus on manual I by coupling manual II’s Plein jeu to manual I’s Montre 8 and Prestant 4, and then coupling both manuals to the Pedal with Soubasse 16 drawn.12 The compromise was that the lack of an independent principal chorus in the Pedal decreased the polyphonic independence of the pedal part. Concessions would also have to be made to perform a piece from the Baroque era that required one manual for soloing a melody and one for a homophonic accompaniment, as for example, Bach’s “O Mensch, bewein’ dein’ Sünde groß” from the Orgelbüchlein. Ideally, the ornate melodic line of such a piece requires a solo stop characteristic of an early eighteenth-century organ such as a cromorne or cornet.13

Organ music performed for services

An impression as to what music Demessieux typically played during services at St-Esprit can be formed by examining running lists she kept from 1937 to the beginning of 1944. For the years 1937 through 1939, she tracked only services on some special Sundays and out-of-the-ordinary occasions. The following lists have been selected to exemplify where in a service Demessieux played, and what was typically played during those years:14

Holy Day of Easter 1937
– 10:00 AM Mass –
Entrance: Choral in A minor -Franck
Offertory: Largo -Handel
Recessional: Toccata -Widor
– 11:30 AM Mass –
Entrance: Prelude in G major -Bach
Offertory: Adagio -Franck
Recessional: Toccata -Widor
– Vespers* –
Entrance: Choral -Boëllmann
Recessional: Toccata in D minor -Bach
Vespers was a Sunday late-afternoon service involving the singing of psalms, a hymn, and the Magnificat. As indicated in some of Demessieux’s lists of music played for 1937–1939 services, on some Sundays at St-Esprit Vespers was followed by Benediction, which is a short rite, with its own prescribed chants, that venerates the stored eucharistic elements.
Christmas [Day] 1937
– 11:30 AM Mass –
– Recital –
Entrance: Prelude in C -Bach
Offertory: Toccata and Fugue in D minor -Bach
Communion: Fugue in C -Bach
Recessional: Toccata -Widor
Holy Thursday 1939
– 8:30 PM –
Chorale [prelude] O! Homme, pleure sur tes iniquités* -Bach
Chemin de la Croix [excerpts] -Dupré
French for “O Mensch, bewein’ dein’ Sünde groß.”

These sample lists identify the three types of Sunday service for which Demessieux played: 10:00 AM Mass, 11:30 AM Mass, and Vespers in the late afternoon. In Demessieux’s diary of 1940–1946, only the earliest Sunday service is described as High Mass, meaning its liturgy was sung throughout; therefore, the 11:30 AM Mass must have been spoken, rather than sung.15 A spoken or “low” Mass provided much more opportunity for solo organ music. François Sabatier notes that during a low mass organ music began with the entrance piece and might cease only during the sermon, the Elevation, and before the final Benediction.16 According to Joachim Havard de Montagne, 

in certain churches, for “low” masses, which is to say not sung, the organ played nearly without interruption during the course of the mass, clearly going beyond its normal function. These were referred to as “recital-masses.”17

Reflecting this, Demessieux listed the music she performed for the 11:30 Mass on Christmas Day 1937 under the heading “Recital.”

These sample lists also emphasize that during the period 1937–1939 the single composer most frequently performed was Bach. Demessieux’s other repertoire for service playing was typically nineteenth- and twentieth-century French organ music, with occasional representation of other composers. Franck’s Choral in A minor and Dupré’s Le Chemin de la Croix, stand out for being works that were conceived for a three-manual instrument, adapted by Demessieux for performance on two manuals.

For the period December 1940 to January 1944, Demessieux listed every Sunday morning on which she played at St-Esprit and specified what she performed (most often only for the 11:30 Mass). Examples are:

Sunday 10 August 1941
11:30 AM Prelude in A-Flat -Dupré
Improv.: Choral canonique, 5 voices – Trio* – Fugue
In Choral canonique, “Choral” is Dupré’s label for a polyphonic setting of a plainchant theme or German hymn tune. A “Trio” is a 3-voice choral contrapunté. Dupré’s four types of improvisation termed choral, derived from Bach’s chorale preludes, are described in his Traité d’improvisation à l’orgue (Paris: Leduc, 1925), 50–54.
Sunday 3 May 1942
10:00 AM Improv. on a theme of G. Fleury [theme quoted]
11:30 AM Chorale prelude: Gloria* -Bach
Pièce héroïque -Franck
                            Improv.: Variations and symphonic Allegro, theme of G. Fleury [quoted]

* Gloria likely refers to one of Bach’s organ settings of “Allein Gott in der Hoh’ sei Ehr’.”

Sunday 18 April 1943 (Palm Sunday)
11:30 AM Chemin de la Croix: 9th, 5th, 12th, 14th [Stations] -Dupré
Improv.: Symphonic poem on the [plainchant] Communion
Saturday 25 December 1943 (Christmas [Day])
11:30 AM Noël in D minor -Daquin
Variations sur un vieux Noël* -Dupré
Improv.: Fugue on Dans une pauvre étable [French Christmas carol]
This is probably Dupré’s Variations sur un Noël, Op. 20.

Overall, these samples of Demessieux’s lists from the 1930s and 1940s show some of the range of both repertoire and improvisational forms she played at St-Esprit. In her lists for December 1940 to January 1944 as a whole (though not shown above), the composer most often represented is once again Bach. This suggests Demessieux agreed with Dupré that the German composer’s music was the foundation of all organ-playing, and that Bach’s chorale preludes were as suited to Catholic as to Protestant services. For comparison, here is a program Demessieux recorded in her notebook after hearing Dupré perform on a Sunday morning at St-Sulpice:

Marcel Dupré, St-Sulpice, 1 January 1942 (Circumcision)
High Mass [Trio] Sonata No. 6 (1st mvt.) -Bach
11:15 AM Veni, creator -Titelouze*
En toi est la joie -Bach
La vieille année s’en est allée -Bach
Recessional: Improvisation
Jehan Titelouze was a French composer and organist (1563–1733) who lived and worked in Dupré’s native city, Rouen.
† The chorale prelude “In dir ist Freude” from Bach’s Orgelbüchlein. 
‡ The chorale prelude Das alte Jahr vergangen ist from Bach’s Orgelbüchlein. 

Surveying Demessieux’s complete set of lists, what further observations can be made about the period 1940–1944 as far as her approach to repertoire selection is concerned?

• The composer’s name that occurs second-most-often is Dupré, reflecting Demessieux’s loyalty to her teacher and mentor during these years.

• Otherwise, she included large-scale works by Liszt and Franck, movements from Handel concertos, and a sprinkling of pre-Bach organ music.

• The improvisational forms Demessieux used during this period include all those that Dupré specifies in his treatise on improvisation as being appropriate to Catholic worship services:18

  • prelude
  • fugue
  • choral (e.g., choral canonique, choral orné)
  • toccata
  • variations
  • passacaglia
  • symphonic movements: singly, in pairs, or all four.

• Demessieux also indicated two exceptional titles for an improvisation: fantaisie and poème symphonique (one instance of each appears in the lists from 1940–1944).

• Where Demessieux named the theme upon which she improvised, it was typically a plainchant, or, if she also played a Bach chorale prelude that morning, she sometimes improvised on the same German hymn tune. In other instances that an improvisation was indicated, she jotted down, beside her description of it, a theme of her own invention, or one proposed to her by someone visiting her organ gallery.

As outlined above, Demessieux’s record of music played at High Mass at St-Esprit lists what she performed during the Entrance, the Offertory, and as the Recessional, and occasionally what she performed during the Communion. But Demessieux could arguably have played at other points during a sung mass as well.

First, in his treatise on improvisation, Dupré lists the Entrance, Offertory, and Recessional as the only liturgical actions that allow performance of a piece involving some development. In addition, he lists three other moments the organ may be required to perform something short—Gradual and Elevation, as well as Communion.19

Second, as is also explained by Dupré, and noted by François Sabatier, in the period between the wars (as in the nineteenth century and prior), French organists are said to have performed “versets” in alternation with the choir’s plainchant.20 In this procedure (alternatim), the singing of specific passages (versets) in the Ordinary of the Mass, and chants prescribed for Vespers, was replaced by a short organ setting, typically improvised, of the plainchant melody. In the diary of 1940–1946, there is one place where Demessieux notes that, at Vespers at St-Esprit, she “created some versets, responding to the hymn.”21 However, Demessieux’s repertoire lists do not tell us whether during High Mass at St-Esprit substitution of organ versets at specific points in plainchant performance was the norm. Only one intriguing entry, under the heading 1937, suggests this practice:

Holy Saturday 1937
– High Mass -*
Entrance: none played Gloria and Sanctus
Offertory: [none played] alternating with the 
Communion: choir and harmonium
Recessional: Toccata -Scarlatti†
Demessieux did not indicate the service time. “High Mass” suggests it was possibly held in the morning and was, in any case, not an Easter Vigil service.

† According to John Henderson, A Directory of Composers for Organ, 2d ed. (Swindon, Wiltshire: John Henderson Ltd., 1999), 525, Alessandro Scarlatti composed “some 16 toccatas,” one of which, Toccata 10, is in the Antologia Organistica (G. Ricordi & Co.), following p. 58, and may be viewed at <https://imslp.org/wiki/Antologia_organistica_italiana%2C_sec._XVI-XIX_(Scarpa%2C_Jolando)>, accessed Sept. 25, 2022.

The following questions arise from Demessieux’s note in the far right-hand column: Did she regularly play in alternation with the St-Esprit choir during the singing of certain portions of High Mass? Why was the harmonium used for this Holy Saturday service?

I asked these of the current organist of St-Esprit, Hampus Lindwall.22 According to what parishioners old enough to have sung in the choir during the time of Demessieux have told him, plainchant was, indeed, sung in this style. Therefore, this may have applied to all sung Masses as well as Vespers. Writing in 2022, Lindwall said that the harmonium had only recently been rediscovered in the crypt of the church: it appears to have been there all along. He also noted the possibility exists that—even after the church’s main space came into use—smaller celebrations continued to take place in the crypt in times gone by. He could not say for sure, however, whether these were accompanied by the harmonium. Nevertheless, Demessieux’s note concerning Holy Saturday in 1937 suggests that use of the harmonium, presumably for services held in the crypt, was the case, at least on occasion.

 

To recapitulate, in Chapter 1, I explained how exceptional it was that the young Demessieux was able to study in Paris; in Chapter 2, I described what it was like for her to study specifically at the Paris Conservatory. This chapter has focused on the organ and music she played at the Church of St-Esprit. It is time now to turn to Demessieux’s own descriptions of her activities, beginning with her diary and letters of 1932–1940.

 

NOTES:

1 This paragraph is based on Vincent Hildebrandt, “The Organs of Paris: Saint Esprit” © 2021 <www.organsparisaz4.vhhil.nl/St%20Esprit.htm>, accessed Mar. 7, 2024, unless otherwise indicated.
2 Christiane Trieu-Colleney, Jeanne Demessieux: Une vie de luttes et de gloire (Avignon: Les Presses Universelles, 1977), 37. The present-day organist of St-Esprit, Hampus Lindwall, has learned from members of the parish old enough to have known Demessieux that, when she was first engaged, it was not known at all that she was an exceptionally gifted young musician (email of Feb. 17, 2022).
3 Conversation with long-time Demessieux friend, and parishioner of St-Esprit, Madeleine Chacun, June 2003.
4 François Sabatier, “Des relations entre liturgie, musique et facture d’orgues en France des origines à Vatican II,” L’Orgue, No. 274 (2006a): 24, explains that by the second half of the nineteenth century cathedrals and large churches in France often had two organs—a grand orgue located in the gallery above the entrance, and a smaller orgue de chœur (or harmonium) located in the chancel and near the choir—with each organ having its own titular organist. The smaller organ was meant principally to accompany the choir and the large organ fulfilled all other functions of the organ in Catholic services.
5 The web page at <https://www.jehanalain.ch/EN/organo.php?id_sezione=2>, accessed Mar. 7, 2024, describes, in its present state, the most famous organ designed by Albert Alain, a 4-manual instrument that he himself built for his home. It is now located in the attic of the Grange de la Dîme in Romainmôtier, Switzerland.
6 Trieu-Colleney 1977, 37; and Vincent Hildebrandt, “The Organs of Paris: Saint Esprit,” © 2021 <www.organsparisaz4.vhhil.nl/St%20Esprit.htm>, accessed Mar. 7, 2024. This web page also describes how the organ was altered and enlarged in 1968 and 1985, and, in a 2022 update, reports a plan to move a grand orgue of 45 stops and three manuals from a Rouen church to Paris, for installation above the main entrance of St-Esprit. Demessieux’s diary entry of Jun. 12, 1945 describes Marcel Dupré’s failed attempt to convince the parish priest of the time to invest in the building of a grand orgue for St-Esprit.
7 Pierre Denis, “Les Organistes français d’aujourd’hui, XVI. Jeanne Demessieux,” L’Orgue: Bulletin de l’Association des Amis de L’Orgue, No. 75 (1955/II): 39 n. 1. The current specification may be viewed at <http://orgue.free.fr/a12o6.html>, accessed Mar. 7, 2024.
8 Marc Hedelin, “La Facture d’Orgues à Paris au tournant des années 1930,” L’Orgue: L’Orgue à Paris dans les années 1930, Nos. 295–296 (2011): 196.
9 Ibid., 197.
10 “Upperwork” refers to stops whose pitch is above the 4-foot level, that is 2-foot, mutation, and mixture stops.
11 For example, in François Couperin’s Messe pour les Paroisses, there are movements entitled “Duo sur les Tierces” and “Tierce en Taille.”
12 In my discussion concerning Demessieux with Dutch organist Hans Leenders, who had studied with Demessieux student Jean Wolfs (probably in the late 1970s-early 1980s), Leenders noted that Demessieux’s preferred registration for playing polyphonic music by Bach was the combination known in French as fonds: 16, 8, 4, that is, without the 2-foot and mixture stops presently believed to create the sound Bach had in mind (conversation with Hans Leenders in Maastricht, the Netherlands, May 13, 2003). In other words, manual I of the St-Esprit organ had, in itself, the combination of stops Demessieux preferred to use when playing a Bach prelude and fugue.
13 A cromorne is a Baroque solo reed, and the French equivalent of the German stop called krummhorn. A cornet is a solo mixture stop combining stops at pitch levels 8, (4), 22/3, 2, and 13/5, or something similar.
14 AM 4S13, “Almanach et listes des œuvres jouées.” For the most part, the formatting of the original lists is retained. Some words have been translated from French to English.
15 See, for example, the diary entry of Dec. 25, 1940.
16 Sabatier 2006a, 43–44. The “Elevation” is the moment in the Eucharistic liturgy when the priest lifts up the bread and wine after each element is consecrated, becoming the body and blood of Christ.
17 Joachim Havard de Montagne, “Un rappel: la place de l’orgue dans la liturgie traditionnelle” <http://www.musimem.com/orgue-et-liturgie.htm#:~:text=Avant%20les%20r%C3%A9formes%20liturgiques%20de,%C3%A0%20peu%20pr%C3%A8s%20%C3%A9gale%20importance>, accessed Mar. 7, 2024.
18 Dupré 1925, 134–35. The only form that Dupré lists on those pages as appropriate to Catholic services that is not stated or suggested in Demessieux’s lists is the binary form Dupré terms “air.”
19 Dupré 1925, 134–135. On p. 134 Dupré notes that if the Offertory is sung, the organ piece is always very short.
20 Dupré 1925, 134, lists the versets for which the organ may replace the choir during the Mass, Vespers, Compline, and Benediction. Sabatier 2006a, 37, states that during the interwar period the traditional practice of alternating choir and organ continued to be permitted during the Kyrie, Gloria, Sanctus, Agnus Dei, and Deo gratias of the Mass, and during psalms, hymns, and canticles of Vespers. By Deo gratias, he presumably means the response to the concluding Ite, missa est.
21 Diary entry of Dec. 25, 1940. Four diary entries note that Demessieux improvised versets when she played for Vespers at St-Sulpice: Jul. 27, 1941; Jan. 1, 1942; Feb. 7, 1943; and Apr. 1, 1945.
22 My letter of Jan. 22 and email reply by H. Lindwall of Feb. 17, 2022.

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