
Charles Tournemire Ă Sainte-Clotilde
Collection Odile Weber
(Jean-Marc Leblanc, âMĂ©moires de Charles Tournemire: Ădition critique,â
LâOrgue. 2018 IâIV, nÂș 321â324, page 276)
To Speak Oneâs Own Language
The French organist Charles Tournemire (1870â1939) is one of the great enigmas in the musical world. He graced humanity with a formidable Ćuvre, which includes symphonies, operas, chamber music, and, of course, organ works, yet he has been relegated to the periphery in the musical canonânone more so than his magnum opus, LâOrgue Mystique. This mammoth, two-hundred-fifty-three-movement, fifteen-hour-long liturgical work, based upon over three hundred Gregorian chants, is of Wagnerian scale and is equally enmeshed with and a challenge to the cultural currents of Tournemireâs time as Wagnerâs own masterpieces were to his era. While Wagner would garner cachĂ© and would be revisited throughout history, LâOrgue Mystique and Charles Tournemire are little knownâeven among organistsâand are seldom experienced. Why should this be so?
Tournemireâs student and his eventual successor to the organ loft of Sainte-Clotilde, Jean Langlais (1907â 1991), offered this sage insight: âThis music is very difficult for many people, because Tournemire wrote unlike anyone wrote before him and anyone after him, and that is very dangerous for an artistâto speak his own language.â The term languageâin this instanceâspeaks not simply to musical constructs such as Affeckt, harmony, or structure, but to the greater systems that Tournemireâs language sought to articulate.
Jean Langlaisâs reminiscences of his maĂźtre Charles Tournemire

Charles Tournemire devant le portail de Sainte-Clotilde
Collection Daniel-Lesur
(Jean-Marc Leblanc, âMĂ©moires de Charles Tournemire: Ădition critique,â
LâOrgue. 2018 IâIV, nÂș 321â324, page 270)
The Issue of Religion
Undeniably, the subject matter of Tournemireâs worksânamely that of religionâboth imposes upon Tournemire subjective labels and categorisations that make him problematic. These issues are not simply an emanation of the wrangling between theism and atheism or inter-denominational punctilios; they speak to the true nature and purpose of religion as opposed to its practice.
The existential purpose of religion, which is rooted in ontology and the exploration of the bounds of human epistemology within Divine ineffability, is often overshadowed by more immediately appealing anthropocentric needs or desires, such as personal identity, meaning, and easy cognizability. Religion is a philosophical system of ontology. However, in practice, religion is often institutionally banalised both by well-meaning, intellectually underdeveloped parochial clergy and by hieratical pragmatists fearful of empty pews. Indeed, most of the public finds pondering to be too ponderous, and that the role of religion is that of a Rotary Clubâa source of community, meaning, identity, and self-gratifying good deedsâand as a framework to âproof textâ and thereby legitimise oneâs own significance and personal desires. Religionâs true purposeâa theocentric contemplation of the ontic within the phenomenological and the apotheosis or henosis of the created with its Creatorâis lost in the welter of more anthropocentric priorities. These theocentric and anthropocentric realms each have their own function, systems, and, therefore, languages that must be understood independently from one another, even though there are prima facie overlapping facets.
Tournemireâs religion was not that of the pulpit or the pewâan institution fighting for its existence or laity longing for community and a self-affirming identityâbut of that of a âmysticââa theological metaphysician whose language was that of artâor more specifically, music. He insisted upon upholding the highest ideals with regard to the vocation of organist, averring a musical axiology, famously writing that âOrgan music where God is absent is a body without a soul.â (136)
How did this come to be?
Richard Spotts: Sunday Afternoon Recital (October 16, 2022)

Alexandre Séon
Sùr Péladan, the Symbolists, and Chant
Tournemireâs spiritualformation blossomed after hismarriage to Alice Georgina Taylor(1870â1920) in 1903. Alice Taylorâs sister, Christine [Christiane] Taylor, became the second wife of JosĂ©phin PĂ©ladan (1858â1918), a French mystic who was a leading figure of the Rosicrucian or the French occult revival. He was the founder of the Ordre de Rose a Croix in Paris and a leading proponent of the Symbolist Movement.
âSĂąrâ PĂ©ladan, as he would later be known, was a brilliant characterâif a bit eccentric. Tournemire recollected: âPĂ©ladan had found a way, as only a few men over the centuries, to be able to store within the vast satchel of his memory all of the intellectual production since Antiquity! He had acquired, so to speak, memory without failure, but he sometimes had dubious judgment! Nevertheless, his vast erudition made him a walking and âportableâ library.â (121)
Of art, PĂ©ladan remarked: âArt is manâs effort to realise the Ideal, to form and represent the supreme Idea, the Idea par excellence, the abstract Idea. Great artists are religious because to materialise the Idea of God, the Idea of an angel, the Idea of the Virgin Mother, requires an incomparable psychic effort and procedure. Making the invisible visible: that is the true purpose of art and its only reason for existence.â (122)

Salon de la Rose+Croix
Between 1892 and 1897, Péladan hosted six Salons de Rose a Croix whose subject matter dealt with religion and mysticism. Involving over two hundred visual, literary, and performance artists, these salons served as a popular promotional vehicle for the artistic endeavours of the Symbolists.
The Symbolist Movement first emerged in the literary genre through the poetry of Charles Pierre Baudelaire (1821â1867), Paul-Marie Verlaine (1844â1896), and StĂ©phane MallarmĂ© (1842â1898), as well as the plays of Maurice Polydore Marie Bernard Maeterlinck (1862â1949). However, it expanded into the visual arts and later the performing arts.
The poet Jean MorĂ©as (1856â1910) published what would become known as the Symbolist Manifesto [Le Symbolisme] in Le Figaro on the eighteenth of September 1886, an essay that articulated and officially launched the movement. In the article, MorĂ©as wrote that one should âclothe the Ideal in sensible form.â He continued: âThus, in this art [âŠ] none of the concrete phenomena are manifestations of themselves: these are rather the sense-perceptible appearances whose destiny isto represent their esoteric affinitieswith primordial Ideals.â (122)
Owing much to Schopenhauerianism and his Neo-Platonic vision of the world, the Symbolistsâthrough literature, the visual arts, and musicâsought to grapple with the nature of Truthâdelving behind the dull, encrusted veneer of phenomena whose patina hides greater things. In the Symbolist world, art sought to exhibit correspondence with the noumenal through the semiotic use of figurative ontic imagery to evoke a sense or ken of the ontologicalâthe invocation of a deeper or, perhaps, latent form of intellectual engagement. In the Symbolist conception, art istheology and philosophyânot simply ĂŠsthetics or a sensual delight and amusement. Here, art is a kind of languageâa conceptual, communicative medium used in philosophical discourseâand a tool of epistemology. Theirs was a qualitative versus a quantitative linguistic and conceptual systemâa system that they felt to be more apposite to the perception and denomination of the ineffable nature of Truth than the comforting realm of Materialist categorisation.

Charles Tournemire: Photo Guy Ringenbach 25 sept 1928
Collection Daniel-Lesur et Societé Baudelaire
(Jean-Marc Leblanc, âMĂ©moires de Charles Tournemire: Ădition critique,â
LâOrgue. 2018 IâIV, nÂș 321â324, page 271)
Informed by the Symbolist outlook, Tournemire also came to revere the literature of the nineteenth-century novelists, essayists, andCatholic Mystics, Joris-Karl Huysmans(1848â1907), Ernest Hello (1828â1885), and LĂ©on Bloy (1846â1917). Bloy, who has been given the moniker âThe Pilgrim of the Absoluteâ, spoke to the issue of the language of the âmysticâ, saying, âI am so much at home in the Absolute that the man who does not speak the language of the Absolute tells me nothing.â (126)
It was also at this time that the monastery of Solesmes promulgated their conception of Gregorian chant, who, through their new semiological and paleological studies, reintroduced melodic and rhythmic conceptions of these ancient melodies that would ultimately inform Tournemireâs own musical output. Indeed, the Liber Usualis would be Tournemireâs vade mecum. Every week, he would set the Liber on the organ and improvise on the prescribed chants for the day. When asked how he saw his role as organist, Tournemire replied:
I see it very tightly fused with the liturgy, that is to say, taking inspiration from the splendour of the liturgical texts and Gregorian lines as âthe aerial and mobile paraphrase of the immovable structure of the cathedrals.â [Huysmans] In short, it is advisable to comment every Sunday on the Divine Office by means of improvisations or works directly related to the texts of the day. (375)
Reminiscences of Alice Tournemire née Espir of her husband, Charles Tournemire
LâOrgue Mystique
It was through these germinal influences that LâOrgue Mystique was born. Written between 1927 and 1932, using a liturgical framework, Tournemire created a work that was both an act of devotion and a musical exegesis based upon chant âlibrettiâ. Whereas many composers of lesser merit simply use a chant or chorale as a thematic motive to explore musically, informed by the Symbolists, Tournemire looked to the theology behind the chant and saw chant melody as a vocabulary to express that theology.
When describing LâOrgue Mystique, he frequently used the term paraphrase, which refers not simply to its musical note citation but to its theological hermeneutic. He called the final movement to each Office a rĂ©sumĂ©, meaning a compilation of thoughts for each feast. Hence, it is not just Tournemireâs musical exploitation of chant that makes LâOrgue Mystique significant, but it is the exegetical elucidations that Tournemire evinced through chant, combined with his ability to educe within the heart of the listener the latent human intuitive ken of the Divine through his medium that makesit an artistic apogee in the realm ofsacred music. Indeed, Olivier Messiaen lauded Tournemireâs approach, stating that âone can hardly use the themes of plainchant more and better than Charles Tournemire in his LâOrgue Mystique.â (255)

Charles Tournemire Ă Sainte-Clotilde (1933)
Collect Marcel DegrutĂšre
(Jean-Marc Leblanc, âMĂ©moires de Charles Tournemire: Ădition critique,â
LâOrgue. 2018 IâIV, nÂș 321â324, page 273)
Musically, Tournemire sought to âclothe the Ideal in sensible formâ; therefore, while drawing upon the liturgical texts, Tournemire called upon sonorous depictions of ecclesiastical architecture and oceanic imagery for which he had a great affinity. Throughout LâOrgue Mystique, Tournemire conjures euphonious representations of bells, incense, and the gleaming windows of stained glass. Paraphrase-carillon and VerriĂšre [stained glass] are the most obvious examples of such elements, but there are also more obscure ones, such as when he referred (post hoc) to AllĂ©luia nÂș V for the Eighth Sunday after Pentecost to be a representation of the rose window in the north transept of Notre-Dame in Paris. (319)
Seeing Gregorian chant and Gothic architecture as inextricably linked, Tournemire often quoted these aforementioned words of Huysmans: âPlainchant isthe aerial and mobile paraphrase of the immovable structure of the cathedrals.â (124) He further wrote of the conjoining of sacred architecture and chant:
If the Protestant choraleâs inestimable plastic value had inspired musicians of the stature of Scheidt and Bach, could not Gregorian chant, altogether richer, perhaps give birth to a new art supported by polyphony or polytonality? To penetrate this musical temple of the angelic lines necessitates prolonged religious and mystical preparation. The light, at first discrete, brightens faintly; but the addiction to the chant par excellence of the Church is an admirable thing. Imperceptibly, the soul is illuminated. A profound emotion is felt when an antiphon or an Alleluia is heard. VoilĂ , the door is open to the sonic edifice where the incense rises up. [âŠ] The Eternal entices to God a legion of Christian artists so that they purify contemporary art and carry this forth in knowledge and faith! (253)
LâOrgue Mystique is also rife with oceanic imagery. Tournemire summered at a cottage on the Ăle dâOuessant, a small island at the end of an archipelago on the northwestern tip of France, where he would draw up plans for the compositions to be formally penned throughout the year when he returned to Paris in the autumn. Daniel Jean-Yves Lesur (1908â2002) recollected, âHis love of nature was intense. Each year saw him carry back from
his retreat on the Ăle dâOuessant one or another new chef dâĆuvre, pondered while facing the ocean. The oceanâs presence marked his character with a sense of universal grandeur. The ocean and the cathedrals.â (178) Emanating from the chant texts themselves, he extrapolated symbolic correlations between natural phenomena and the Divine, peppering the work with sunrisings and settings, the stars at night, and the ocean waves. In Tournemireâs book on his teacher and predecessor at Sainte-Clotilde, CĂ©sar Franck (1822â1890) (which, in fact, was his manifesto on the creation of LâOrgue Mystique), the connection between his experience on the Ăle dâOuessant and LâOrgue Mystique becomes clear:
Why should I hide my emotion while thinking that the Dispenser of Grace, indeed, wished to grant me that power to praise Him with simple musical prayers: LâOrgue Mystique? And why not add that I found therein the path which leads to the prayerful contemplation of unfathomable depths!
Let us contemplate the ocean! Does not its voiceâgreat, deep, and sometimesterrifyingâ announce to us the majesty of the One who gives it life? Does one not see therein the image of life: the unleashing of the waves, the quelling, the infinite calm? Does it not singâand with what loftinessâceaseless and ever-changing hymns? When the wave breaks, how magnificent, and when it reaches the summit of a high rock, bursting forth its spray, let us give wonder and sing: âO come, let us sing unto the Lord: let us make a joyful noise to the rock of our salvation. Let us come before his presence with thanksgiving, and make a joyful noise unto him with psalms. For the Lord is a great God, and a great King above all gods. In his hand are the deep places of the earth: the strength of the hills is his also. The sea is his, and he made it: and his hands formed the dry land.â [Psalm xciv/xcv] (235)
Indeed, the Venite chant that cites Psalm xciv/xcv would become one of LâOrgue Mystiqueâs Leitmotifs, so the Ăle dâOuessant haunts the work throughout.
Yet, these phenomenological elements are merely symbols pointing to that which is infinite and ineffable. Recollecting the beliefs of the Symbolists, we hearken back to the words of MorĂ©as: âThus, in this art none of the concrete phenomena are manifestations of themselves: these are rather the sense-perceptible appearances whose destiny is to represent their esoteric affinities with primordial Ideals.â Or as PĂ©ladan remarked: âMaking the invisible visible: that is the true purpose of art and its only reason for existence.â
L’Orgue Mystique: Ann Labounsky Interview (Full Version)

Charles Tournemire: Photographie Henri Martinie, rue de PenthiĂšvre, Paris
Collection Daniel-Lesur
(Jean-Marc Leblanc, âMĂ©moires de Charles Tournemire: Ădition critique,â
LâOrgue. 2018 IâIV, nÂș 321â324, page 262)
The Language of Ineffability
The critic Norbert Dufourcq (1904â1990), in a 1938 article in La Revue musicale, wrote of Tournemire: âThe great art of Charles Tournemire is one that appeals to an elite; it speaks to our sensitivity first, but it requires culture and effort from the listener.â (375)
As with all religious language, Tournemireâs music should not be taken as a mere aesthetic experience or a prima facie statement, representation, or definition, but rather as an asymptotic symbolic understanding of something that has an infinite ontology. To defineâas its etymology suggestsâis to denominate a finitude, which is a non-sequitur to the essence of that which is called God. As a kind of sonorous prosopopĆiaâgiving voice to otherwise silent, immaterial, or non-anthropomorphic essencesâthe language of Tournemireâs music represents a euphonous evocation of religious symbolism, and these figural symbols are offered as adumbral images of an ineffable concept called upon in an attempt to define without being a definitionâdefiniendum sans definiensâan exegetical device seeking to poetically entify the noumenal and suggest this is like as God. It is this hermeneutical quality and functionâwithin and beyond the liturgyâthat Tournemire believed to be musicâs ultimate raison dâĂȘtre.

Charles Tournemire: Photographie J. Vilatobå, Sabadell (Espagne), début julliet 1930
Collection Daniel-Lesur
(Jean-Marc Leblanc, âMĂ©moires de Charles Tournemire: Ădition critique,â LâOrgue. 2018 IâIV, nÂș 321â324, 269)
Upon the publication of his Lyrical Ballads in 1807, that poetic harbinger of Romanticism, William Wordsworth (1780â1850), wrote in a letter to Lady Beaumont the following: âEvery great and original writer, in proportion as he is great or original, must himself create the taste by which he is to be relished; he must teach the art by which he is to be seen.â (XXIII) With this in mind, time must be taken to elucidate the genius of Tournemireâs art and, indeed, the genius of art itself.
Dufourcq called Tournemireâs music âa sonoroussynthesis of the cathedralâ, averring that he âhas produced some of the most original conceptions to have emerged from the twentieth century.â (377â378) This is true, but to begin to understand Tournemireâs music, one must understand the language that he is speaking. Tournemire often cited these words of Ernest Hello: âHigher than reason, orthodox mysticism sees, hears, touches, and feels that which reason is incapable of seeing, hearing, touching, and feeling.â (125) It is through this language that Tournemire is communicating to usâthat is, the Language of Ineffability.
Kilgen Organ Recital – Richard Spotts
About the Author
The organist Richard Spotts is the author of Charles Tournemireâs LâOrgue Mystique: La Haute Mission, which is a comprehensive study of French society and its relationship with the Catholic Church, the role of art in the conceptualisation of theological principles, and the personalities of the individuals that set these thoughts into motion, all of which formed important aspects of LâOrgue Mystique, which is given a thorough analysis of the two hundred-fifty-three-movement work. For more information on the book, visit the Leupold Foundation [https://theleupoldfoundation.org/product/spotts-richard-charles-tournemires-lorgue-mystique-la-haute-mission/].
Richard will be giving a complete performance of âLâOrgue Mystiqueâ [https://richspotts.com/events/the complete-lorgue-mystique-by-charles-tournemire-2026/] in Philadelphia at Saint Paulâs Episcopal Church, Chestnut Hill [https://stpaulschestnuthill.org/], which is home to a culturally historic, newly restored Aeolian Skinner organ [https://stpaulschestnuthill.org/music/organ/] that is also the largest church organ in the city. This will be done as a seventeen-part series on the Mondays, Tuesdays, and Wednesdays of Lent 2026, from February 23rd through March 31st. For more information, visit richspotts.com.
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