Gabriel Pierné  

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Henri Constant Gabriel Pierné (16 August 1863Template:Ndash17 July 1937) was a French composer, conductor, and organist.

Contents

Biography

Gabriel Pierné was born in Metz in 1863. His family moved to Paris to escape the Franco-Prussian War. He studied at the Paris Conservatoire, gaining first prizes for solfege, piano, organ, countrepoint and fugue. He won the French prix de Rome in 1882, with his cantata Edith. His teachers included Antoine François Marmontel, Albert Lavignac, Émile Durand, César Franck (organ) and Jules Massenet (composition).

He succeeded Franck as organist at Saint Clotilde Basilica in Paris from 1890 to 1898. He himself was succeeded by another distinguished Franck pupil, Charles Tournemire. Associated for many years with Édouard Colonne's concert series, the Concerts Colonne, from 1903, Pierné became chief conductor of this series in 1910.

His most notable early performance was the world premiere of Igor Stravinsky's ballet The Firebird, at the Ballets Russes, Paris, on 25 June 1910. He and remained in the post until 1934 (Paul Paray took over his duties from 1933).

He died in Ploujean, Finistère, in 1937.

Music

Pierné wrote several operas and choral and symphonic pieces with Catholic themes, as well as a good deal of chamber music. His most famous composition is probably the oratorio La Croisade des Enfants. Also notable such shorter works as his March of the Little Lead Soldiers; the popular Marche des petits Faunes is from his ballet Cydalise et le Chèvre-pied. His chamber work, Introduction et variations sur une ronde populaire, for saxophone quartet is a standard in saxophone quartet repertoire.

His discovery and promotion of the work of Ernest Fanelli in 1912 led to a controversy over the origins of impressionist music.

Honours

He received the French Légion_d'honneur in 1900. He became member of the Academie des Beaux Arts in 1924

The Square Gabriel Pierné in Paris is named for him.

Selected compositions

Orchestral works

  • Serenade for Strings
  • Trois pièces formant suite de concert, 1883
  • Suite No. 1, 1883
  • Envois de Rome (Suite – Ouverture – Les Elfes), ca. 1885
  • Fantaisie-ballet, for piano and orchestra, 1885
  • Piano concerto, Op. 12, 1886
  • Scherzo-caprice, for piano and orchestra, 1890
  • Ballet de cour, 1901
  • Concertstück, for harp and orchestra, 1903
  • Poème symphonique, for piano and orchestra, 1903
  • Two suites from Ramuntcho, 1910
  • Paysages franciscains, Op. 43, 1920
  • Fantasie basques, for harp and orchestra, 1927
  • Divertissement sur un thème pastoral, Op. 49, 1932
  • Gulliver au pays de Lilliput, 1935
  • Viennoise, suite, Op. 49bis, 1935

Works for band

  • Marche des petits soldats de plomb (March of the Little Lead Soldiers)
  • Marche solennelle (1899) (dedicated to Gustave Wettge)
  • Petit Gavotte et Farandole
  • Ramuntcho

Operas

  • La coupe enchantée, 1895
  • Vendée (Drame lyrique), 1897
  • La fille de Tabarin (opéra comique), 1901
  • On ne badine pas avec l'amour (opéra comique), 1910
  • Sophie Arnould (opéra comique), 1927
  • Fragonard, 1934

Ballets

  • Le Collier de Saphir, 1891
  • Les joyeuses commères de Paris, 1892
  • Bouton-d'or, 1895
  • Cydalise et le chèvre-pied, 1923
  • Impressions de music-hall, 1927
  • Giration, 1934
  • Images, 1935

Music for theatre

  • Yanthis, 1894
  • La princesse lontaine, 1895
  • La Samaritaine, 1897
  • Ramuntcho, 1908
  • Les Cathédrales, 1915

Piano works

  • Étude de concert in C minor, Op. 13
  • Album pour mes petits amis, Op. 14

Solo harp works

  • Impromptu-Caprice, Op. 9





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