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Jean Françaix

Jean René Désiré Françaix (May 23, 1912September 25 1997) was a French neoclassical composer, pianist, and orchestrator, known for his prolific output and vibrant style.

Contents

Life

Françaix's natural gifts were encouraged from an early age by his family: his father a musicologist, composer, and pianist, and his mother, a teacher of singing. He was only six when he took up composing, and his first publication, in 1922, caught the attention of a composer working for the publishing house who steered the gifted boy toward a gifted teacher, Nadia Boulanger. She encouranged Françaix's career, often conducting his works herself. Françaix himself often played his own works, to public acclaim; he was an accomplished pianist from an early age, and was sought after for accompanying as well as solo performances.

He was considered a virtuoso pianist and a skilled orchestrator, but his primary occupation was his extraordinarily active compositional career. He remained prolific throughout his life; even in 1981 he described himself as "constantly composing", barely finishing one piece before beginning another, and continued thus until his death in 1997.

Music

Maurice Ravel said of the young Françaix to the boy's parents, "Among the child's gifts I observe above all the most fruitful an artist can possess, that of curiosity: you must not stifle these precious gifts now or ever, or risk letting this young sensibility wither." They did not, and he flourished: Françaix was a prolific composer, writing over 200 pieces in a wide variety of styles.

Since he was a virtuoso pianist, many of his works feature the piano, particularly his numerous chamber works which he wrote for nearly every orchestral instrument and standard ensemble. He was a skilled orchestrator, which was reflected in his use of tone colors. Françaix wrote pieces in many of the major large musical forms, including concerti, symphonies, opera, theatre, ballet, and works drawing on traditions falling out of favor in the 20th century, such as the cantata. Though he often put his own modern spin on the old modes of expression, he was an avowed neoclassicist who rejected atonality and formless wanderings, and he drew from great literature of the past for his vocal settings. He also wrote ten film scores for director Sacha Guitry.

Françaix's style is marked by lightness and wit (a stated goal of his was to "give pleasure"), as well as a conversational style of interplay between the musical lines. It changed little throughout his career; while he was influenced by composers he admired (such as Igor Stravinsky, Maurice Ravel, and Francis Poulenc), he integrated what he picked up into his own distinct aesthetic, which was already evident in his early works.

Selected notable works

  • "Scherzo" (1932), his first mature work for solo piano
  • Eight Bagatelles (1932), piano and string quartet
  • String trio (1933)
  • Wind quartet (1933)
  • Beach (1933), ballet
  • Quintet for flute, harp and string trio (1934)
  • "Petit quatour" (1935), saxophone quartet
  • Piano concerto (1936)
  • L'apocalypse selon Saint-Jean (1939), oratorio
  • L'apostrophe (1940), a musical comedy
  • Wind quintet (1948)
  • Les demoiselles de la nuit (1948), ballet
  • Napoléon (1954), film score for S. Guitry
  • L'horloge de Flore (1959), for oboe and orchestra
  • Suite for solo flute (1962)
  • Six preludes (1963), strings
  • Double piano concerto (1965)
  • La princesse de Clèves (1965), his most successful opera
  • Flute concerto (1967)
  • Clarinet concerto (1968)
  • Cassazione (1975), for three orchestras
  • Quintet for clarinet and string quartet (1977)
  • Double concerto for flute, clarinet, and orchestra (1991)
  • Accordion concerto (1993)

References

External links

Last updated: 05-21-2005 19:04:15
10-26-2009 08:16:03
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