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Les corps glorieux, Sept visions brèves de la Vie des ressuscités (French: The Bodies Glorious, Seven Brief Visions of the Life of the Resurrected) are a large cycle for organ composed in the summer of 1939 [1] [2] in Saint-Théoffrey by Olivier Messiaen.
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Les eaux de la Grâce ("The Fountains of Grace") L'ange aux parfums ("The Angel of Perfumes") Combat de Mort et de la Vie ("Battle of Life and Death") Force et agilité des Corps Glorieux ("Strength and Agility of the Glorious Bodies") Joie et clarté des Corps Glorieux ("Joy and Clarity of the Glorious Bodies")
He also wrote the extensive cycles La Nativité du Seigneur ("The Nativity of the Lord") and Les Corps glorieux ("The glorious bodies"). [34] At the outbreak of World War II, Messiaen was drafted into the French army. Due to poor eyesight, he was enlisted as a medical auxiliary rather than an active combatant. [35]
2006 – Messiaen: Les Corps Glorieux; 2006 – A Windsor Collection; 2002 – A Land of Pure Delight (RSCM Millennium Youth Choir) 2000 – Twelve Organs of Edinburgh; 1995 – The Organ of St Mary's Cathedral, Edinburgh; 1994 - Weelkes: Cathedral Music Anthems Vol 10 (Winchester Cathedral Choir, David Hill)
Diptyque : essai sur la vie terrestre et l'éternité bienheureuse (French: Diptych: essay on earthly life and blessed eternity) is a bipartite essay for organ in C minor by French composer Olivier Messiaen.
Résurrection des morts (Resurrection of the dead). Stained glass, around 1200, in the Sainte-Chapelle. Et exspecto resurrectionem mortuorum (And I await the resurrection of the dead) is a suite for wind orchestra and percussion instruments by Olivier Messiaen, written in 1964 and first performed the following year.
La Trinité, Paris, where Messiaen was titular organist; the venue of the work's 1936 première.. La Nativité du Seigneur, neuf méditations pour orgue (The Birth of the Lord, nine meditations for organ) is an important work for organ, written by the French composer Olivier Messiaen in 1935 in Grenoble.