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Gabriel Fauré

Gabriel Urbain Fauré (French: [ɡabʁiɛl yʁbɛ̃ fɔʁe];[1] 12 May 1845 – 4 November 1924)[n 1] was a French composer, organist, pianist and teacher. He was one of the foremost French composers of his generation, and his musical style influenced many 20th-century composers. Among his best-known works are his Pavane, Requiem, Sicilienne, nocturnes for piano and the songs "Après un rêve" and "Clair de lune". Although his best-known and most accessible compositions are generally his earlier ones, Fauré composed many of his most highly regarded works in his later years, in a more harmonically and melodically complex style.

Fauré in 1907

Fauré was born into a cultured but not especially musical family. His talent became clear when he was a young boy. At the age of nine, he was sent to the Ecole Niedermeyer music college in Paris, where he was trained to be a church organist and choirmaster. Among his teachers was Camille Saint-Saëns, who became a lifelong friend. After graduating from the college in 1865, Fauré earned a modest living as an organist and teacher, leaving him little time for composition. When he became successful in his middle age, holding the important posts of organist of the Église de la Madeleine and director of the Paris Conservatoire, he still lacked time for composing; he retreated to the countryside in the summer holidays to concentrate on composition. By his last years, he was recognised in France as the leading French composer of his day. An unprecedented national musical tribute was held for him in Paris in 1922, headed by the president of the French Republic. Outside France, Fauré's music took decades to become widely accepted, except in Britain, where he had many admirers during his lifetime.

Fauré's music has been described as linking the end of Romanticism with the modernism of the second quarter of the 20th century. When he was born, Chopin was still composing, and by the time of Fauré's death, jazz and the atonal music of the Second Viennese School were being heard. The Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, which describes him as the most advanced composer of his generation in France, notes that his harmonic and melodic innovations influenced the teaching of harmony for later generations. During the last twenty years of his life, he suffered from increasing deafness. In contrast with the charm of his earlier music, his works from this period are sometimes elusive and withdrawn in character, and at other times turbulent and impassioned.

Biography

Early years

Fauré was born in Pamiers, Ariège, in the south of France, the fifth son and youngest of six children of Toussaint-Honoré Fauré (1810–85) and Marie-Antoinette-Hélène Lalène-Laprade (1809–87).[4] According to the biographer Jean-Michel Nectoux, the Fauré family dates to the 13th century in that part of France.[5] The family had at one time been substantial landowners, but by the 19th century its means had become reduced. The composer's paternal grandfather, Gabriel, was a butcher whose son became a schoolmaster.[6] In 1829 Fauré's parents married. His mother was the daughter of a minor member of the nobility. He was the only one of the six children to display musical talent; his four brothers pursued careers in journalism, politics, the army and the civil service, and his sister had a traditional life as the wife of a public servant.[4]

The young Fauré was sent to live with a foster mother until he was four years old.[7] When his father was appointed director of the École Normale d'Instituteurs, a teacher training college, at Montgauzy, near Foix, in 1849, Fauré returned to live with his family.[8] There was a chapel attached to the school, which Fauré recalled in the last year of his life:

I grew up, a rather quiet well-behaved child, in an area of great beauty. ... But the only thing I remember really clearly is the harmonium in that little chapel. Every time I could get away I ran there – and I regaled myself. ... I played atrociously ... no method at all, quite without technique, but I do remember that I was happy; and if that is what it means to have a vocation, then it is a very pleasant thing.[9]

 
Fauré as a student, 1864

An old blind woman, who came to listen and give the boy advice, told his father of Fauré's gift for music.[7] In 1853 Simon-Lucien Dufaur de Saubiac, of the National Assembly,[n 2] heard Fauré play and advised Toussaint-Honoré to send him to the École de Musique Classique et Religieuse (School of Classical and Religious Music), better known as the École Niedermeyer de Paris, which Louis Niedermeyer was setting up in Paris.[14] After reflecting for a year, Fauré's father agreed and took the nine-year-old boy to Paris in October 1854.[15]

Helped by a scholarship from the bishop of his home diocese, Fauré boarded at the school for 11 years.[16] The régime was austere, the rooms gloomy, the food mediocre, and the required uniform elaborate.[10][n 3] The musical tuition, however, was excellent.[10] Niedermeyer, whose goal was to produce qualified organists and choirmasters, focused on church music. Fauré's tutors were Clément Loret for organ, Louis Dietsch for harmony, Xavier Wackenthaler for counterpoint and fugue, and Niedermeyer for piano, plainsong and composition.[15]

When Niedermeyer died in March 1861, Camille Saint-Saëns took charge of piano studies and introduced contemporary music, including that of Schumann, Liszt and Wagner.[18] Fauré recalled in old age, "After allowing the lessons to run over, he would go to the piano and reveal to us those works of the masters from which the rigorous classical nature of our programme of study kept us at a distance and who, moreover, in those far-off years, were scarcely known. ... At the time I was 15 or 16, and from this time dates the almost filial attachment ... the immense admiration, the unceasing gratitude I [have] had for him, throughout my life."[19]

Saint-Saëns took great pleasure in his pupil's progress, which he helped whenever he could; Nectoux comments that at each step in Fauré's career "Saint-Saëns's shadow can effectively be taken for granted."[20] The close friendship between them lasted until Saint-Saëns died sixty years later.[2]

Fauré won many prizes while at the school, including a premier prix in composition for the Cantique de Jean Racine, Op. 11, the earliest of his choral works to enter the regular repertory.[15] He left the school in July 1865, as a Laureat in organ, piano, harmony and composition, with a Maître de chapelle diploma.[21]

Organist and composer

On leaving the École Niedermeyer, Fauré was appointed organist at the Church of Saint-Sauveur, at Rennes in Brittany. He took up the post in January 1866.[22] During his four years at Rennes he supplemented his income by taking private pupils, giving "countless piano lessons".[23] At Saint-Saëns's regular prompting he continued to compose, but none of his works from this period survive.[24] He was bored at Rennes and had an uneasy relationship with the parish priest, who correctly doubted Fauré's religious conviction.[25] Fauré was regularly seen stealing out during the sermon for a cigarette, and in early 1870, when he turned up to play at Mass one Sunday still in his evening clothes, having been out all night at a ball, he was asked to resign.[25] Almost immediately, with the discreet aid of Saint-Saëns, he secured the post of assistant organist at the church of Notre-Dame de Clignancourt, in the north of Paris.[26] He remained there for only a few months. On the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War in 1870 he volunteered for military service. He took part in the action to raise the siege of Paris, and saw action at Le Bourget, Champigny and Créteil.[27] He was awarded a Croix de Guerre.[28]

 
Staff and students of the École Niedermeyer, 1871. Fauré in front row second from left; André Messager in middle row second from right

After France's defeat by Prussia, there was a brief, bloody conflict within Paris from March to May 1871 during the Commune.[28] Fauré escaped to Rambouillet where one of his brothers lived, and then travelled to Switzerland, where he took up a teaching post at the École Niedermeyer, which had temporarily relocated there to avoid the violence in Paris.[28] His first pupil at the school was André Messager, who became a lifelong friend and occasional collaborator.[29] Fauré's compositions from this period did not overtly reflect the turmoil and bloodshed. Some of his colleagues, including Saint-Saëns, Gounod and Franck, produced elegies and patriotic odes. Fauré did not, but according to his biographer Jessica Duchen, his music acquired "a new sombreness, a dark-hued sense of tragedy ... evident mainly in his songs of this period including L'Absent, Seule! and La Chanson du pêcheur."[30]

When Fauré returned to Paris in October 1871, he was appointed choirmaster at the Église Saint-Sulpice under the composer and organist Charles-Marie Widor.[29] In the course of his duties, he wrote several canticles and motets, few of which have survived.[31] During some services, Widor and Fauré improvised simultaneously at the church's two organs, trying to catch each other out with sudden changes of key.[30] Fauré regularly attended Saint-Saëns's musical salons and those of Pauline Viardot, to whom Saint-Saëns introduced him.[15]

Fauré was a founding member of the Société Nationale de Musique, formed in February 1871 under the joint chairmanship of Romain Bussine and Saint-Saëns, to promote new French music.[32] Other members included Georges Bizet, Emmanuel Chabrier, Vincent d'Indy, Henri Duparc, César Franck, Édouard Lalo and Jules Massenet.[33] Fauré became secretary of the society in 1874.[34] Many of his works were first presented at the society's concerts.[34]

 
Fauré in 1875

In 1874 Fauré moved from Saint-Sulpice to the Église de la Madeleine, acting as deputy for the principal organist, Saint-Saëns, during the latter's many absences on tour.[35] Some admirers of Fauré's music have expressed regret that although he played the organ professionally for four decades, he left no solo compositions for the instrument.[36] He was renowned for his improvisations,[37] and Saint-Saëns said of him that he was "a first class organist when he wanted to be".[38] Fauré preferred the piano to the organ, which he played only because it gave him a regular income.[38] Duchen speculates that he positively disliked the organ, possibly because "for a composer of such delicacy of nuance, and such sensuality, the organ was simply not subtle enough."[39]

The year 1877 was significant for Fauré, both professionally and personally.[40] In January his first violin sonata was performed at a Société Nationale concert with great success, marking a turning-point in his composing career at the age of 31.[40] Nectoux counts the work as the composer's first great masterpiece.[41] In March, Saint-Saëns retired from the Madeleine, succeeded as organist by Théodore Dubois, his choirmaster; Fauré was appointed to take over from Dubois.[40] In July Fauré became engaged to Pauline Viardot's daughter Marianne, with whom he was deeply in love.[40] To his great sorrow, she broke off the engagement in November 1877, for reasons that are not clear.[42] To distract Fauré, Saint-Saëns took him to Weimar and introduced him to Franz Liszt. This visit gave Fauré a liking for foreign travel, which he indulged for the rest of his life.[42] From 1878, he and Messager made trips abroad to see Wagner operas. They saw Das Rheingold and Die Walküre at the Cologne Opera; the complete Ring cycle at the Hofoper in Munich and at Her Majesty's Theatre in London; and Die Meistersinger in Munich and at Bayreuth, where they also saw Parsifal.[43] They frequently performed as a party piece their joint composition, the irreverent Souvenirs de Bayreuth. This short, up-tempo piano work for four hands sends up themes from The Ring.[44] Fauré admired Wagner and had a detailed knowledge of his music,[45] but he was one of the few composers of his generation not to come under Wagner's musical influence.[n 4]

Middle years

 
Fauré by John Singer Sargent, 1889

In 1883 Fauré married Marie Fremiet, the daughter of a leading sculptor, Emmanuel Fremiet.[47][n 5] Nectoux comments that Marie was "without beauty, wit or a fortune ... narrow and cold",[48] but records that "in spite of everything [Fauré] still felt a tenderness towards her". The marriage was affectionate, but Marie was, in Nectoux's phrase, "a stay-at-home", and she did not share her husband's wish to go out in the evenings,[49] and became resentful of his frequent absences, his dislike of domestic life – "horreur du domicile" – and his love affairs, while she remained at home.[47] Though Fauré valued Marie as a friend and confidante, writing to her often – sometimes daily – when away from home, she did not share his passionate nature, which found fulfilment elsewhere.[50] Fauré and his wife had two sons. The first, born in 1883, Emmanuel Fauré-Fremiet (Marie insisted on combining her family name with Fauré's),[49] became a biologist of international reputation.[51] The second son, Philippe, born in 1889, became a writer; his works included histories, plays, and biographies of his father and grandfather.[52]

Contemporary accounts agree that Fauré was extremely attractive to women;[n 6] in Duchen's phrase, "his conquests were legion in the Paris salons."[54] After a romantic attachment to the singer Emma Bardac from around 1892,[55] followed by another to the composer Adela Maddison,[56] in 1900 Fauré met the pianist Marguerite Hasselmans, the daughter of Alphonse Hasselmans. This led to a relationship which lasted for the rest of Fauré's life. He maintained her in a Paris apartment, and she acted openly as his companion.[57]

 
Fauré and Marie in 1889

To support his family, Fauré spent most of his time in running the daily services at the Madeleine and giving piano and harmony lessons.[58] His compositions earned him a negligible amount, because his publisher bought them outright, paying him an average of 60 francs for a song, and Fauré received no royalties.[59] During this period, he wrote several large-scale works, in addition to many piano pieces and songs, but he destroyed most of them after a few performances, only retaining a few movements in order to re-use motifs.[15] Among the works surviving from this period is the Requiem, begun in 1887 and revised and expanded, over the years, until its final version dating from 1901.[60] After its first performance, in 1888, the priest in charge told the composer, "We don't need these novelties: the Madeleine's repertoire is quite rich enough."[61]

As a young man Fauré had been very cheerful; a friend wrote of his "youthful, even somewhat child-like, mirth."[62] From his thirties he suffered bouts of depression, which he described as "spleen", possibly first caused by his broken engagement and his lack of success as a composer.[15] In 1890 a prestigious and remunerative commission to write an opera with lyrics by Paul Verlaine was aborted by the poet's drunken inability to deliver a libretto. Fauré was plunged into so deep a depression that his friends were seriously concerned about his health.[63] Winnaretta de Scey-Montbéliard,[n 7] always a good friend to Fauré, invited him to Venice, where she had a palazzo on the Grand Canal.[64] He recovered his spirits and began to compose again, writing the first of his five Mélodies de Venise, to words by Verlaine, whose poetry he continued to admire despite the operatic debacle.[65]

 
Emma Bardac

About this time, or shortly afterwards, Fauré's liaison with Emma Bardac began; in Duchen's words, "for the first time, in his late forties, he experienced a fulfilling, passionate relationship which extended over several years".[66] His principal biographers all agree that this affair inspired a burst of creativity and a new originality in his music, exemplified in the song cycle La bonne chanson.[67] Fauré wrote the Dolly Suite for piano duet between 1894 and 1897 and dedicated it to Bardac's daughter Hélène, known as "Dolly".[15][n 8] Some people suspected that Fauré was Dolly's father, but biographers including Nectoux and Duchen think it unlikely. Fauré's affair with Emma Bardac is thought to have begun after Dolly was born, though there is no conclusive evidence either way.[68]

During the 1890s Fauré's fortunes improved. When Ernest Guiraud, professor of composition at the Paris Conservatoire, died in 1892, Saint-Saëns encouraged Fauré to apply for the vacant post. The faculty of the Conservatoire regarded Fauré as dangerously modern, and its head, Ambroise Thomas, blocked the appointment, declaring, "Fauré? Never! If he's appointed, I resign."[69] However, Fauré was appointed to another of Guiraud's posts, inspector of the music conservatories in the French provinces.[70] He disliked the prolonged travelling around the country that the work entailed, but the post gave him a steady income and enabled him to give up teaching amateur pupils.[71]

 
Clockwise from top left: Saint-Saëns, Thomas, Massenet, Dubois

In 1896 Ambroise Thomas died, and Théodore Dubois took over as head of the Conservatoire. Fauré succeeded Dubois as chief organist of the Madeleine. Dubois' move had further repercussions: Massenet, professor of composition at the Conservatoire, had expected to succeed Thomas, but had overplayed his hand by insisting on being appointed for life.[72] He was turned down, and when Dubois was appointed instead, Massenet resigned his professorship in fury.[73] Fauré was appointed in his place.[74] He taught many young composers, including Maurice Ravel, Florent Schmitt, Charles Koechlin, Louis Aubert, Jean Roger-Ducasse, George Enescu, Paul Ladmirault, Alfredo Casella and Nadia Boulanger.[15] In Fauré's view, his students needed a firm grounding in the basic skills, which he was happy to delegate to his capable assistant André Gedalge.[75] His own part came in helping them make use of these skills in the way that suited each student's talents. Roger-Ducasse later wrote, "Taking up whatever the pupils were working on, he would evoke the rules of the form at hand ... and refer to examples, always drawn from the masters."[76] Ravel always remembered Fauré's open-mindedness as a teacher. Having received Ravel's String Quartet with less than his usual enthusiasm, Fauré asked to see the manuscript again a few days later, saying, "I could have been wrong".[77] The musicologist Henry Prunières wrote, "What Fauré developed among his pupils was taste, harmonic sensibility, the love of pure lines, of unexpected and colorful modulations; but he never gave them [recipes] for composing according to his style and that is why they all sought and found their own paths in many different, and often opposed, directions."[78]

Fauré's works of the last years of the century include incidental music for the English premiere of Maurice Maeterlinck's Pelléas et Mélisande (1898) and Prométhée, a lyric tragedy composed for the amphitheatre at Béziers. Written for outdoor performance, the work is scored for huge instrumental and vocal forces. Its premiere in August 1900 was a great success, and it was revived at Béziers the following year and in Paris in 1907. A version with orchestration for normal opera house-sized forces was given at the Paris Opéra in May 1917 and received more than forty performances in Paris thereafter.[n 9]

From 1903 to 1921, Fauré regularly wrote music criticism for Le Figaro, a role in which he was not at ease. Nectoux writes that Fauré's natural kindness and broad-mindedness predisposed him to emphasise the positive aspects of a work.[15]

Head of Paris Conservatoire

In 1905 a scandal erupted in French musical circles over the country's top musical prize, the Prix de Rome. Fauré's pupil Ravel had been eliminated prematurely in his sixth attempt for this award, and many believed that reactionary elements within the Conservatoire had played a part in it.[80] Dubois, who became the subject of much censure, brought forward his retirement and stepped down at once.[81] Appointed in his place, and with the support of the French government, Fauré radically changed the administration and curriculum. He appointed independent external judges to decide on admissions, examinations and competitions, a move which enraged faculty members who had given preferential treatment to their private pupils; feeling themselves deprived of a considerable extra income, many of them resigned.[82] Fauré was dubbed "Robespierre" by disaffected members of the old guard as he modernised and broadened the range of music taught at the Conservatoire. As Nectoux puts it, "where Auber, Halévy and especially Meyerbeer had reigned supreme ... it was now possible to sing an aria by Rameau or even some Wagner – up to now a forbidden name within the Conservatoire's walls".[83] The curriculum was broadened to range from Renaissance polyphony to the works of Debussy.[83]

Fauré's new position left him better off financially. However, while he also became much more widely known as a composer, running the Conservatoire left him with no more time for composition than when he was struggling to earn a living as an organist and piano teacher.[84] As soon as the working year was over, in the last days of July, he would leave Paris and spend the two months until early October in a hotel, usually by one of the Swiss lakes, to concentrate on composition.[85] His works from this period include his lyric opera, Pénélope (1913), and some of his most characteristic later songs (e.g., the cycle La chanson d'Ève, Op. 95, completed in 1910) and piano pieces (Nocturnes Nos. 9–11; Barcarolles Nos. 7–11, written between 1906 and 1914).[15]

 
Fauré at the turn of the century

Fauré was elected to the Institut de France in 1909, after his father-in-law and Saint-Saëns, both long-established members, had canvassed strongly on his behalf. He won the ballot by a narrow margin, with 18 votes against 16 for the other candidate, Widor.[86][n 10] In the same year a group of young composers led by Ravel and Koechlin broke with the Société Nationale de Musique, which under the presidency of Vincent d'Indy had become a reactionary organisation, and formed a new group, the Société musicale indépendante. While Fauré accepted the presidency of this society, he also remained a member of the older one and continued on the best of terms with d'Indy; his sole concern was the fostering of new music.[86] In 1911 he oversaw the Conservatoire's move to new premises in the rue de Madrid.[85]

During this time, Fauré developed serious problems with his hearing. Not only did he start to go deaf, but sounds became distorted, so that high and low notes sounded painfully out of tune to him.[88]

The turn of the 20th century saw a rise in the popularity of Fauré's music in Britain, and to a lesser extent in Germany, Spain and Russia.[89] He visited England frequently, and an invitation to play at Buckingham Palace in 1908 opened many other doors in London and beyond.[90] He was in London for the premiere of Elgar's First Symphony in 1908 and dined with the composer.[91] Elgar later wrote to their mutual friend Frank Schuster that Fauré "was such a real gentleman – the highest kind of Frenchman and I admired him greatly."[92] Elgar tried to get Fauré's Requiem put on at the Three Choirs Festival, but it did not finally have its English premiere until 1937, nearly fifty years after its first performance in France.[92] Composers from other countries also loved and admired Fauré. In the 1880s Tchaikovsky had thought him "adorable";[93] Albéniz and Fauré were friends and correspondents until the former's early death in 1909;[94] Richard Strauss sought his advice;[95] and in Fauré's last years, the young American Aaron Copland was a devoted admirer.[2]

The outbreak of the First World War almost stranded Fauré in Germany, where he had gone for his annual composing retreat. He managed to get from Germany into Switzerland, and thence to Paris.[96] He remained in France for the duration of the war. When a group of French musicians led by Saint-Saëns tried to organise a boycott of German music, Fauré and Messager dissociated themselves from the idea, though the disagreement did not affect their friendship with Saint-Saëns.[n 11] Fauré did not recognise nationalism in music, seeing in his art "a language belonging to a country so far above all others that it is dragged down when it has to express feelings or individual traits that belong to any particular nation."[99] Nonetheless, he was aware that his own music was respected rather than loved in Germany. In January 1905, visiting Frankfurt and Cologne for concerts of his music, he had written, "The criticisms of my music have been that it's a bit cold and too well brought up! There's no question about it, French and German are two different things."[100]

Last years and legacy

In 1920, at the age of 75, Fauré retired from the Conservatoire because of his increasing deafness and frailty.[15] In that year he received the Grand-Croix of the Légion d'honneur, an honour rare for a musician. In 1922 the president of the republic, Alexandre Millerand, led a public tribute to Fauré, a national hommage, described in The Musical Times as "a splendid celebration at the Sorbonne, in which the most illustrious French artists participated, [which] brought him great joy. It was a poignant spectacle, indeed: that of a man present at a concert of his own works and able to hear not a single note. He sat gazing before him pensively, and, in spite of everything, grateful and content."[88]

 
National hommage to Fauré, 1922. Fauré and President Millerand are in the box between the statues

Fauré suffered from poor health in his later years, brought on in part by heavy smoking. Despite this, he remained available to young composers, including members of Les Six, most of whom were devoted to him.[88][n 12] Nectoux writes, "In old age he attained a kind of serenity, without losing any of his remarkable spiritual vitality, but rather removed from the sensualism and the passion of the works he wrote between 1875 and 1895."[15]

In his last months, Fauré struggled to complete his String Quartet. Twenty years earlier he had been the dedicatee of Ravel's String Quartet. Ravel and others urged Fauré to compose one of his own. He refused for many years, on the grounds that it was too difficult. When he finally decided to write it, he did so in trepidation, telling his wife, "I've started a Quartet for strings, without piano. This is a genre which Beethoven in particular made famous, and causes all those who are not Beethoven to be terrified of it."[102] He worked on the piece for a year, finishing it on 11 September 1924, less than two months before he died, working long hours towards the end to complete it.[103] The quartet was premiered after his death;[104] he declined an offer to have it performed privately for him in his last days, as his hearing had deteriorated to the point where musical sounds were horribly distorted in his ear.[105]

Fauré died in Paris from pneumonia on 4 November 1924 at the age of 79. He was given a state funeral at the Église de la Madeleine and is buried in the Passy Cemetery in Paris.[106]

After Fauré's death, the Conservatoire abandoned his radicalism and became resistant to new trends in music, with Fauré's own harmonic practice being held up as the farthest limit of modernity, beyond which students should not go.[107] His successor, Henri Rabaud, director of the Conservatoire from 1922 to 1941, declared "modernism is the enemy".[108] The generation of students born between the wars rejected this outdated premise, turning for inspiration to Bartók, the Second Viennese School, and the latest works of Stravinsky.[107]

In a centenary tribute in 1945, the musicologist Leslie Orrey wrote in The Musical Times, "'More profound than Saint-Saëns, more varied than Lalo, more spontaneous than d'Indy, more classic than Debussy, Gabriel Fauré is the master par excellence of French music, the perfect mirror of our musical genius.' Perhaps, when English musicians get to know his work better, these words of Roger-Ducasse will seem, not over-praise, but no more than his due."[109]

Music

 
Manuscript page of the Requiem

Aaron Copland wrote that although Fauré's works can be divided into the usual "early", "middle" and "late" periods, there is no such radical difference between his first and last manners as is evident with many other composers. Copland found premonitions of late Fauré in even the earliest works, and traces of the early Fauré in the works of his old age: "The themes, harmonies, form, have remained essentially the same, but with each new work they have all become more fresh, more personal, more profound."[2] When Fauré was born, Berlioz and Chopin were still composing; the latter was among Fauré's early influences.[110] In his later years Fauré developed compositional techniques that foreshadowed the atonal music of Schoenberg,[111] and, later still, drew discreetly on the techniques of jazz.[112] Duchen writes that early works such as the Cantique de Jean Racine are in the tradition of French nineteenth-century romanticism, yet his late works are as modern as any of the works of his pupils.[113]

Influences on Fauré, particularly in his early work, included not only Chopin but Mozart and Schumann. The authors of The Record Guide (1955), Sackville-West and Shawe-Taylor, wrote that Fauré learnt restraint and beauty of surface from Mozart, tonal freedom and long melodic lines from Chopin, "and from Schumann, the sudden felicities in which his development sections abound, and those codas in which whole movements are briefly but magically illuminated."[114] His work was based on the strong understanding of harmonic structures that he gained at the École Niedermeyer from Niedermeyer's successor Gustave Lefèvre.[15] Lefèvre wrote the book Traité d'harmonie (Paris, 1889), in which he sets out a harmonic theory that differs significantly from the classical theory of Rameau, no longer outlawing certain chords as "dissonant".[n 13] By using unresolved mild discords and colouristic effects, Fauré anticipated the techniques of Impressionist composers.[115]

In contrast with his harmonic and melodic style, which pushed the bounds for his time, Fauré's rhythmic motives tended to be subtle and repetitive, with little to break the flow of the line, although he used discreet syncopations, similar to those found in Brahms's works.[15] Copland referred to him as "the Brahms of France".[2] The music critic Jerry Dubins suggests that Fauré "represents the link between the late German Romanticism of Brahms ... and the French Impressionism of Debussy."[116]

To Sackville-West and Shawe-Taylor, Fauré's later works do not display the easy charm of his earlier music: "the luscious romantic harmony which had always been firmly supported by a single tonality, later gave way to a severely monochrome style, full of enharmonic shifts, and creating the impression of several tonal centres simultaneously employed."[117]

Vocal music

Fauré is regarded as one of the masters of the French art song, or mélodie.[15] Ravel wrote in 1922 that Fauré had saved French music from the dominance of the German Lied.[118] Two years later the critic Samuel Langford wrote of Fauré, "More surely almost than any writer in the world he commanded the faculty to create a song all of a piece, and with a sustained intensity of mood which made it like a single thought".[119] In a 2011 article the pianist and writer Roy Howat and the musicologist Emily Kilpatrick wrote:

His devotion to the mélodie spans his career, from the ever-fresh "Le papillon et la fleur" of 1861 to the masterly cycle L'horizon chimérique, composed sixty years and more than a hundred songs later. Fauré's songs are now core repertoire for students and professionals, sung in conservatories and recital halls throughout the world.[120]

In Copland's view, the early songs, written in the 1860s and 1870s under the influence of Gounod, except for isolated songs such as "Après un rêve" or "Au bord de l'eau", show little sign of the artist to come. With the second volume of the sixty collected songs written during the next two decades, Copland judged, came the first mature examples of "the real Fauré". He instanced "Les berceaux", "Les roses d'Ispahan" and especially "Clair de lune" as "so beautiful, so perfect, that they have even penetrated to America", and drew attention to less well known mélodies such as "Le secret", "Nocturne", and "Les présents".[2] Fauré also composed a number of song cycles. Cinq mélodies "de Venise", Op. 58 (1891), was described by Fauré as a novel kind of song suite, in its use of musical themes recurring over the cycle. For the later cycle La bonne chanson, Op. 61 (1894), there were five such themes, according to Fauré.[121] He also wrote that La bonne chanson was his most spontaneous composition, with Emma Bardac singing back to him each day's newly written material.[70] Among later works were cycles drawn from the poems of Charles van Lerberghe, La chanson d'Ève (1910) and Le jardin clos (1914).[122]

The Requiem, Op. 48, first performed in 1888, was not composed to the memory of a specific person but, in Fauré's words, "for the pleasure of it." It has been described as "a lullaby of death" because of its predominantly gentle tone.[123] Fauré omitted the Dies irae, though reference to the day of judgment appears in the Libera me, which, like Verdi, he added to the normal liturgical text.[124] Fauré revised the Requiem over the years, and a number of different performing versions are now in use, from the earliest, for small forces, to the final revision with full orchestra.[125]

Fauré's operas have not found a place in the regular repertoire. Prométhée is the more neglected of the two, with only a handful of performances in more than a century.[126] Copland considered Pénélope (1913) a fascinating work, and one of the best operas written since Wagner; he noted, however, that the music is, as a whole, "distinctly non-theatrical."[2] The work uses leitmotifs, and the two main roles call for voices of heroic quality, but these are the only ways in which the work is Wagnerian. In Fauré's late style, "tonality is stretched hard, without breaking."[127] On the rare occasions when the piece has been staged, critical opinion has generally praised the musical quality of the score, but has varied as to the dramatic effectiveness of the work. When the opera was first presented in London in 1970, in a student production by the Royal Academy of Music, Peter Heyworth wrote, "A score that offers rich rewards to an attentive ear can none the less fail to cut much ice in the theatre. ... Most of the music is too recessive to be theatrically effective."[128] However, after a 2006 production at the Wexford Festival, Ian Fox wrote, "Fauré's Pénélope is a true rarity, and, although some lovely music was anticipated, it was a surprise how sure the composer's theatrical touch was."[129]

Piano works

Fauré's major sets of piano works are thirteen nocturnes, thirteen barcarolles, six impromptus, and four valses-caprices. These sets were composed across the decades of his career, and display the change in his style from uncomplicated youthful charm to a final enigmatic, but sometimes fiery introspection, by way of a turbulent period in his middle years.[2] His other notable piano pieces, including shorter works, or collections composed or published as a set, are Romances sans paroles, Ballade in F major, Mazurka in B major, Thème et variations in C major, and Huit pièces brèves. For piano duet, Fauré composed the Dolly Suite and, together with his friend and former pupil André Messager, an exuberant parody of Wagner in the short suite Souvenirs de Bayreuth.[130]

The piano works often use arpeggiated figures, with the melody interspersed between the two hands, and include finger substitutions natural for organists. These aspects make them daunting for some pianists. Even a virtuoso like Liszt said that he found Fauré's music hard to play.[43][n 14] The early piano works are clearly influenced by Chopin.[133] An even greater influence was Schumann, whose piano music Fauré loved more than any other.[134] In Copland's view, it was with the sixth Nocturne that Fauré fully emerged from any predecessor's shadow.[2] The pianist Alfred Cortot said, "There are few pages in all music comparable to these."[2] The critic Bryce Morrison has noted that pianists frequently prefer to play the charming earlier piano works, such as the Impromptu No. 2, rather than the later piano works, which express "such private passion and isolation, such alternating anger and resignation" that listeners are left uneasy.[135] In his piano music, as in most of his works, Fauré shunned virtuosity in favour of the classical lucidity often associated with the French.[115] He was unimpressed by purely virtuoso pianists, saying, "the greater they are, the worse they play me."[136]

Orchestral and chamber works

Fauré was not greatly interested in orchestration, and on occasion asked his former students such as Jean Roger-Ducasse and Charles Koechlin to orchestrate his concert and theatre works. In Nectoux's words, Fauré's generally sober orchestral style reflects "a definite aesthetic attitude ... The idea of timbre was not a determining one in Fauré's musical thinking".[137] He was not attracted by flamboyant combinations of tone-colours, which he thought either self-indulgent or a disguise for lack of real musical invention.[15] He told his students that it should be possible to produce an orchestration without resorting to glockenspiels, celestas, xylophones, bells or electrical instruments.[138] Debussy admired the spareness of Fauré's orchestration, finding in it the transparency he strove for in his own 1913 ballet Jeux; Poulenc, by contrast, described Fauré's orchestration as "a leaden overcoat ... instrumental mud".[139] Fauré's best-known orchestral works are the suites Masques et bergamasques (based on music for a dramatic entertainment, or divertissement comique), which he orchestrated himself,[140] Dolly, orchestrated by Henri Rabaud,[141] and Pelléas et Mélisande which draws on incidental music for Maeterlinck's play; the stage version was orchestrated by Koechlin, but Fauré himself reworked the orchestration for the published suite.[138]

In the chamber repertoire, his two piano quartets, in C minor and G minor, particularly the former, are among Fauré's better-known works.[142] His other chamber music includes two piano quintets, two cello sonatas, two violin sonatas, a piano trio and a string quartet. Copland (writing in 1924 before the string quartet was finished) held the second quintet (in C minor, Opus 115) to be Fauré's masterpiece: "... a pure well of spirituality ... extremely classic, as far removed as possible from the romantic temperament."[2] Other critics have taken a less favourable view: The Record Guide commented, "The ceaseless flow and restricted colour scheme of Fauré's last manner, as exemplified in this Quintet, need very careful management, if they are not to become tedious."[142] Fauré's last work, the String Quartet, has been described by critics in Gramophone magazine as an intimate meditation on the last things,[143] and "an extraordinary work by any standards, ethereal and other-worldly with themes that seem constantly to be drawn skywards."[144]

Recordings

Fauré made piano rolls of his music for several companies between 1905 and 1913.[n 15] Well over a hundred recordings of Fauré's music were made between 1898 and 1905, mostly of songs, with a few short chamber works, by performers including the singers Jean Noté and Pol Plançon and players such as Jacques Thibaud and Alfred Cortot.[146] By the 1920s a range of Fauré's more popular songs were on record, including "Après un rêve" sung by Olga Haley,[147] and "Automne" and "Clair de lune" sung by Ninon Vallin.[148] In the 1930s better-known performers recorded Fauré pieces, including Georges Thill ("En prière"),[149] and Jacques Thibaud and Alfred Cortot (Violin Sonata No. 1 and Berceuse).[150] The Sicilienne from Pelléas et Mélisande was recorded in 1938.[151]

By the 1940s there were a few more Fauré works in the catalogues. A survey by John Culshaw in December 1945 singled out recordings of piano works played by Kathleen Long (including the Nocturne No. 6, Barcarolle No. 2, the Thème et Variations, Op. 73, and the Ballade Op. 19 in its orchestral version conducted by Boyd Neel), the Requiem conducted by Ernest Bourmauck, and seven songs sung by Maggie Teyte.[152] Fauré's music began to appear more frequently in the record companies' releases in the 1950s. The Record Guide, 1955, listed the Piano Quartet No. 1, Piano Quintet No. 2, the String Quartet, both Violin Sonatas, the Cello Sonata No. 2, two new recordings of the Requiem, and the complete song cycles La bonne chanson and La chanson d'Ève.[153]

In the LP and particularly the CD era, the record companies have built up a substantial catalogue of Fauré's music, performed by French and non-French musicians. Several modern recordings of Fauré's music have come to public notice as prize-winners in annual awards organised by Gramophone and the BBC.[n 16] Sets of his major orchestral works have been recorded under conductors including Michel Plasson (1981)[154] and Yan Pascal Tortelier (1996).[155] Fauré's main chamber works have all been recorded, with players including the Ysaÿe Quartet, Domus, Paul Tortelier, Arthur Grumiaux, and Joshua Bell.[156] The complete piano works have been recorded by Kathryn Stott (1995),[157] and Paul Crossley (1984–85),[158] with substantial sets of the major piano works from Germaine Thyssens-Valentin,[159] (Jean-Philippe Collard (1982–84),[160] Pascal Rogé (1990),[161] and Kun-Woo Paik (2002).[162] Fauré's songs have all been recorded for CD, including a complete set (2005), anchored by the accompanist Graham Johnson, with soloists Jean-Paul Fouchécourt, Felicity Lott, John Mark Ainsley and Jennifer Smith, among others.[163] The Requiem and the shorter choral works are also well represented on disc.[164] Pénélope has been recorded twice, with casts headed by Régine Crespin in 1956, and Jessye Norman in 1981, conducted respectively by Désiré-Émile Inghelbrecht and Charles Dutoit.[165] Prométhée has not been recorded in full, but extensive excerpts were recorded under Roger Norrington (1980).[166]

Modern assessment

A 2001 article on Fauré in Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians concludes thus:

Fauré's stature as a composer is undiminished by the passage of time. He developed a musical idiom all his own; by subtle application of old modes, he evoked the aura of eternally fresh art; by using unresolved mild discords and special coloristic effects, he anticipated procedures of Impressionism; in his piano works, he shunned virtuosity in favor of the Classical lucidity of the French masters of the clavecin; the precisely articulated melodic line of his songs is in the finest tradition of French vocal music. His great Requiem and his Élégie for Cello and Piano have entered the general repertoire.[115]

Fauré's biographer Nectoux writes in the Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians that Fauré is widely regarded as the greatest master of French song, and that alongside the mélodies, the chamber works rank as "Fauré's most important contribution to music".[15] The critic Robert Orledge writes, "His genius was one of synthesis: he reconciled such opposing elements as modality and tonality, anguish and serenity, seduction and force within a single non-eclectic style, as in the Pelléas et Mélisande suite, his symphonic masterpiece. The quality of constant renewal within an apparently limited range ... is a remarkable facet of his genius, and the spare, elliptical style of his single String Quartet suggests that his intensely self-disciplined style was still developing at the time of his death".[167]

Notes and references

Notes

  1. ^ Some early sources including Copland say that Fauré was born on 13 May;[2] the birth register for that date reads "born yesterday" and authorities including Nectoux, Jones and Duchen give 12 May as the date of birth.[3]
  2. ^ Sources differ on Dufaur de Saubiac's position at the Assembly. Jones identifies him as "the parliamentary deputy for the département,[10] as does Johnson;[11] Orledge similarly identifies him as "the member of the Assembly for Ariège";[12] Nectoux describes him as "a senior civil servant in the Chamber of Deputies (or Palais législatif as it was known in the Second Empire)";[7] Duchen does not mention the Assembly, referring to Dufaur de Saubiac as "a local man who worked as an archivist in Paris".[13]
  3. ^ A later writer describes "a photo of Fauré as a boy wearing the school uniform and looking not unlike Arthur Sullivan as one of the children of the Chapel Royal".[17]
  4. ^ Fauré liked some of Wagner's operas more than others. He loved Die Meistersinger, Parsifal and the Ring, was lukewarm about Tannhäuser and Lohengrin and detested Tristan und Isolde. Duchen speculates that "the excess – in sentiment and length" of the last was fundamentally contrary to Fauré's aesthetic sensibilities.[46]
  5. ^ Some sources put an acute accent on the first 'e' of the surname, but Marie Fremiet's letters show that she did not do so. The spelling without the accent is followed by Nectoux, Jones and Duchen.
  6. ^ Alfredo Casella, one of his pupils, wrote that Fauré had "the large, languid and sensual eyes of an impenitent Casanova". It was rumoured in Parisian musical circles that some of Fauré's most talented pupils may have been his illegitimate children. The rumours were never substantiated.[53]
  7. ^ Better known by her original name Winnaretta Singer and her later title the Princesse de Polignac.
  8. ^ In the UK, the first piece, "Berceuse", from the Dolly Suite became Fauré's best-known piece to several generations of children; it was used as the closing music for the BBC Home Service radio programme Listen with Mother, which was broadcast from 1950 to 1982.
  9. ^ The 1907 Paris premiere was staged at the Hippodrome, but the acoustics were so bad that the second performance was moved to the Opéra. The 1917 revised orchestration was made by Roger-Ducasse, at Fauré's request.[79]
  10. ^ Widor was elected the following year.[87]
  11. ^ Fauré and Messager were privately concerned that their old friend was in danger of looking foolish with his excess of patriotism,[97] and also his growing tendency to denounce the works of rising young composers, as in his condemnation of Debussy's En blanc et noir: "We must at all costs bar the door of the Institut against a man capable of such atrocities; they should be put next to the cubist pictures."[98]
  12. ^ Poulenc was the exception among Les Six in disliking Fauré's music. Nectoux comments that this seems strange because of all the members of Les Six, Poulenc "is the nearest to Fauré in the limpid clarity and singing quality of his own writing, in his charm".[101]
  13. ^ In particular, seventh and ninth chords were no longer considered dissonant, and the mediant could be altered without changing the mode.[15]
  14. ^ Fauré visited Liszt in Zürich in July 1882. The elder composer played one of his own compositions and then began Fauré's Ballade in F major. After a few bars he said, "I've run out of fingers", and asked Fauré to play the rest of the piece to him. Nectoux and Duchen speculate that Liszt may have had difficulty in reading the manuscript or wanted to hear how Fauré himself would play.;[131] Jones and Morrison simply state that Liszt found the music "too difficult".[132]
  15. ^ The rolls of the "Romance sans paroles" No. 3, Barcarolle No. 1, Prelude No. 3, Pavane, Nocturne No. 3, Sicilienne, Thème et variations and Valses-caprices Nos. 1, 3 and 4 survive, and several rolls have been re-recorded on disc.[145]
  16. ^ Among these are, from Gramophone: Gerard Souzay – Best Historical Vocal, 1991; Piano Quartets, Domus – Chamber, 1986; Piano Quintets, Domus – Chamber, 1995; String Quartet (+ Debussy, Ravel), Quatuor Ebène – Recording of the Year, 2009; Nocturnes, Germaine Thyssens-Valentin – Historic Reissue, 2002]; Requiem, Rutter et al – Choral, 1985. Among BBC Awards: String Quartet (+ Franck), Dante Quartet – Chamber, 2009.

References

  1. ^ English approximation of the surname: UK: /ˈfɔːr, ˈfɒr-/, US: /fˈr, fɔː-/ (Wells, John C. (2008), Longman Pronunciation Dictionary (3rd ed.), Longman, ISBN 9781405881180).
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Copland, Aaron. "Gabriel Fauré, a Neglected Master", The Musical Quarterly, October 1924, pp. 573–586 (subscription required)
  3. ^ Nectoux (1991), p. 3; Jones, p. 15; and Duchen, p. 12
  4. ^ a b Duchen, p. 13
  5. ^ Nectoux (1991), p. 3
  6. ^ Duchen, p. 12
  7. ^ a b c Nectoux (1991), p. 4
  8. ^ Duchen, p. 2
  9. ^ Fauré in 1924, quoted in Duchen, p. 14
  10. ^ a b c Jones, p. 15
  11. ^ Johnson, p. 27
  12. ^ Orledge, pp. 5–6
  13. ^ Duchen, p. 15
  14. ^ Nectoux (1991), p. 5
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Nectoux, Jean-Michel. "Fauré, Gabriel (Urbain)", Grove Online, Oxford Music Online, accessed 21 August 2010 (subscription required)
  16. ^ Nectoux, p. 6
  17. ^ Henderson, A. M. "Memories of Some Distinguished French Organists – Fauré", The Musical Times, September 1937, pp. 817–819 (subscription required)
  18. ^ Jones, p. 16
  19. ^ Fauré in 1922, quoted in Nectoux (1984), pp. 1–2
  20. ^ Nectoux (1984), p. 2
  21. ^ Nectoux (1991), p. 502; and Jones, p. 20
  22. ^ Nectoux (1991), p. 12
  23. ^ Nectoux (1991), p. 508
  24. ^ Nectoux (1991), p. 15
  25. ^ a b Jones, p. 21
  26. ^ Duchen, p. 28
  27. ^ Nectoux (1991), p. 503
  28. ^ a b c Duchen, p. 31
  29. ^ a b Jones, p. 27
  30. ^ a b Duchen, p. 32
  31. ^ Nectoux, p. 18
  32. ^ Vallas, p. 135
  33. ^ Jones, p. 28 and Grove
  34. ^ a b Jones, p. 28
  35. ^ Jones, p. 29
  36. ^ See, for example, Henderson, A. M. "Memories of Some Distinguished French Organists – Fauré", The Musical Times, September 1937, pp. 817–819 (subscription required) and Orrey, Leslie. "Gabriel Fauré, 1845–1924", The Musical Times, May 1945, pp. 137–139 (subscription required)
  37. ^ Henderson, A. M. "Memories of Some Distinguished French Organists – Fauré", The Musical Times, September 1937, pp. 817–819 (subscription required)
  38. ^ a b Nectoux (1991), p. 41
  39. ^ Duchen, p. 17
  40. ^ a b c d Jones, p. 33
  41. ^ Nectoux (1991), p. 80
  42. ^ a b Jones, p. 50
  43. ^ a b Jones, p. 51
  44. ^ Wagstaff, John and Andrew Lamb. "Messager, André", Grove Music Online, Oxford Music Online, accessed 14 August 2010 (subscription required)
  45. ^ Nectoux (1991), p. 39
  46. ^ Duchen, p. 58
  47. ^ a b Jones, p. 52
  48. ^ Nectoux, p. 37
  49. ^ a b Nectoux, p. 38
  50. ^ Duchen, p. 66
  51. ^ Willmer, E. N. "Emmanuel Fauré-Fremiet, 1883–1971", Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society, Vol. 18 (November 1972), pp. 187–221 (subscription required)
  52. ^ "Philippe Fauré-Fremiet", WorldCat, accessed 2 April 2012
  53. ^ Duchen, p. 63
  54. ^ Duchen, Jessica. "A still, small voice", The Guardian, 24 November 1995, p. A12
  55. ^ Nectoux (1991), p. 181
  56. ^ Orledge, pp. 16–17
  57. ^ Nectoux (1991), pp. 282–285
  58. ^ Duchen, p. 69
  59. ^ Nectoux (1991), p. 26
  60. ^ Oliver, pp. 215–217
  61. ^ Duchen, p. 80
  62. ^ Jones, p. 31
  63. ^ Duchen, pp. 95–97
  64. ^ Orledge, p. 14
  65. ^ Orledge, p. 15; and Duchen, pp. 98–99
  66. ^ Duchen, p. 105
  67. ^ Duchen, p. 105; Johnson, p. 253; Jones, p. 68; Nectoux, p. 185; and Orledge, p. 15
  68. ^ Nectoux, p. 181; and Duchen, p. 108
  69. ^ Nectoux (1991), p. 224
  70. ^ a b Orledge, p. 15
  71. ^ Jones, p. 65
  72. ^ Jones, p. 78
  73. ^ Nectoux (1984), pp. 224–225
  74. ^ Orledge, p. 16
  75. ^ Nectoux (1991), p. 246
  76. ^ Nectoux (1991), p. 307
  77. ^ Nichols, p. 103
  78. ^ Prunières, Henry, quoted in Copland. (Copland spells the given name as "Henri" and uses the older English term "receipts" for "recipes".)
  79. ^ Nectoux (1991), p. 370
  80. ^ Orledge, p. 21
  81. ^ Nectoux, p. 267
  82. ^ Woldu, Gail Hilson. "Gabriel Fauré, directeur du Conservatoire: les réformes de 1905", Revue de Musicologie, T. 70e, No. 2e (1984), pp. 199–228, Société Française de Musicologie. French text. (subscription required)
  83. ^ a b Nectoux (1991), p. 269
  84. ^ Jones, p. 110
  85. ^ a b Nectoux (1991), p. 270
  86. ^ a b Jones, p. 133
  87. ^ Near, p. vi
  88. ^ a b c Landormy, Paul and M. D. Herter. "Gabriel Fauré (1845–1924)", The Musical Quarterly, Vol. 17, No. 3 (July 1931), pp. 293–301 (subscription required)
  89. ^ Nectoux (1991), p. 278
  90. ^ Nectoux (1991), p. 283
  91. ^ Moore, p. 547
  92. ^ a b Anderson, p. 156
  93. ^ Anderson, Robert. "Review: Insights", The Musical Times, February 1985, pp. 93–94 (subscription required)
  94. ^ Jones, p. 10
  95. ^ Jones, pp. 124–125
  96. ^ Jones, pp. 160–161
  97. ^ Jones, pp. 162–165
  98. ^ Nectoux (1984), p. 108
  99. ^ Caballero, Carlo. "Review: Gabriel Fauré: A Musical Life", 19th-Century Music, Vol. 16, No. 1 (Summer, 1992), pp. 85–92 (subscription required)
  100. ^ Nectoux (1991), p. 277
  101. ^ Nectoux, p. 434
  102. ^ Jones, p. 202
  103. ^ Perreau, p. 3
  104. ^ Jones, p. 192
  105. ^ Nectoux, p. 292
  106. ^ Duchen, p. 212
  107. ^ a b Nectoux (1991), p. 469
  108. ^ Nichols, Roger. "Henri Rabaud", BBC Music, accessed 1 April 2012
  109. ^ Orrey, Leslie."Gabriel Fauré, 1845–1924", The Musical Times, May 1945, pp. 137–139 (subscription required)
  110. ^ Orledge, p. 59; and Nectoux (1991), p. 48
  111. ^ Nectoux (1991), p. 415
  112. ^ Nectoux (1991), p. 401
  113. ^ Duchen, p. 6
  114. ^ Sackville-West, pp. 263–264
  115. ^ a b c Slonimsky, Nicholas. "Fauré, Gabriel (-Urbain)", Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians, Schirmer Reference, New York 2001, accessed 8 September 2010 (subscription required)
  116. ^ Dubins, Jerry. "Review", Fanfare, May 2006, pp. 245–246
  117. ^ Sackville-West, p. 264
  118. ^ Ravel, p. 23
  119. ^ "Gabriel Fauré", The Manchester Guardian, 5 November 1924, p. 16
  120. ^ Howat, Roy and Emily Kilpatrick. "Editorial Challenges in the Early Songs of Gabriel Fauré", Notes – Quarterly Journal of the Music Library Association, December 2011, pp. 239–283
  121. ^ Orledge, pp. 78–81
  122. ^ Johnson, p. 329
  123. ^ Payne, Anthony, "Sweet lullaby of death", The Independent, 5 April 1997
  124. ^ Rosen, pp. 60–74
  125. ^ Orledge, Robert "Fauré Revised", The Musical Times, May 1980, p. 327 (subscription required)
  126. ^ Duchen, p. 197
  127. ^ Murray, p. 120
  128. ^ Heyworth, Peter. "Neglected Penelope", The Observer, 29 November 1970, p. 78
  129. ^ Fox, Ian. "Opera in Review", Opera Canada, January 2006, pp. 45–47
  130. ^ Duchen, pp. 222–224
  131. ^ Nectoux (1991), p.51; and Duchen, p. 61
  132. ^ Jones, p. 51; and Morrison, p. 11
  133. ^ Nectoux (1991), p. 49
  134. ^ Nectoux (1991), p. 43
  135. ^ Morrison, p. 7
  136. ^ Nectoux (1991), p. 379
  137. ^ Nectoux (1991), p. 259
  138. ^ a b Duchen, p. 132
  139. ^ Nectoux (1991), p. 258
  140. ^ Duchen, p. 196
  141. ^ Duchen, p. 226
  142. ^ a b Sackville-West, p. 265
  143. ^ Nichols, Roger. "Fauré and Ravel", Gramophone, August 2000, p. 69
  144. ^ Cowan, Rob. "Debussy, Fauré, Ravel", Gramophone, December 2008, p. 97
  145. ^ Nectoux (1991), p. 45
  146. ^ Centre for the History and Analysis of Recorded Music, accessed 3 May 2012
  147. ^ "Vocalion", The Gramophone, April 1925, p. 63
  148. ^ "Ninon Vallin", The Gramophone, November 1929, p. 19
  149. ^ "Georges Thill", The Gramophone, December 1937, p. 18
  150. ^ "Review", The Gramophone, July 1932, p. 11; and "Chamber Music", The Gramophone, December 1932, p. 19
  151. ^ Anderson, W R. "Second Reviews", The Gramophone, July 1938, p. 24
  152. ^ Culshaw, John. "The Return of Fauré", The Gramophone, December 1945, p. 15
  153. ^ Sackville-West, pp. 265–268
  154. ^ EMI Records, catalogue number 5 86564-2
  155. ^ Chandos Records, catalogue number Chan 9412
  156. ^ March, pp. 450–453
  157. ^ Hyperion Records, catalogue number DA 66911/4
  158. ^ CRD Records, catalogue number 5006
  159. ^ EMI Records, digital remastering from 1956 to 1965) @ Testament 2002, issued under license from EMI Records Ltd.,
  160. ^ EMI Records, catalogue number 5 85261-2
  161. ^ Decca Records, catalogue number 425 606–40
  162. ^ Decca Records, catalogue number 470 246–2
  163. ^ Hyperion Records, catalogue numbers CDA67333-CDA67336
  164. ^ March, pp. 455–456
  165. ^ Discoreale Records, catalogue number DR 10012-4; and Erato Records, catalogue number STU71386
  166. ^ Aristocrat Records, catalogue number 7466 lE5531
  167. ^ Orledge, Robert. "Fauré, Gabriel (Urbain)", The Oxford Companion to Music, Oxford Music Online, accessed 26 September 2010 (subscription required)

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  • Near, John R. Charles-Marie Widor: Symphonie pour orgue et orchestre, opus 42 [bis]. Middleton: A-R Editions. ISBN 0-89579-515-9.
  • Nichols, Roger (1987). Ravel Remembered. London: Faber and Faber. ISBN 0-571-14986-3.
  • Oliver, Michael (1991). "Fauré: Requiem". In Alan Blyth (ed.). Choral Music on Record. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-36309-8.
  • Orledge, Robert (1979). Gabriel Fauré. London: Eulenburg Books. ISBN 0-903873-40-0.
  • Perreau, Stephan (2000). Notes to Ravel and Fauré String Quartets. Hong Kong: Naxos Records. OCLC 189791192.
  • Ravel, Maurice (1922). "Les Mélodies de Gabriel Fauré". In Henry Prunières (ed.). Hommage musical à Fauré (in French). Paris: La revue musicale. OCLC 26757829.
  • Rosen, David (1995). Verdi: Requiem. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-39767-7.
  • Sackville-West, Edward; Desmond Shawe-Taylor (1955). The Record Guide. London: Collins. OCLC 500373060.
  • Vallas, Léon (1951). César Franck. Translated by Hubert Foss. London: Harrap. OCLC 910827.

External links

  • Gabriel Fauré MIDI files – Kunst der Fuge site
  • Free scores by Gabriel Fauré at the International Music Score Library Project (IMSLP)
  • Free scores by Gabriel Fauré in the Choral Public Domain Library (ChoralWiki)
  • Free scores at the Mutopia Project
  • Oeuvres complètes pour orgue / J.S. Bach : révision par Gabriel Fauré. From Sibley Music Library Digital Scores Collection
  • Septuor pour trompette, deux violons, alto, violoncelle, contre-basse et piano, op. 65 par C. Saint-Saëns, à 4 mains par G. Fauré. From Sibley Music Library Digital Scores Collection
  • Gabriel Fauré: A Research and Information Guide by Edward R. Phillips
  • Requiem op. 48 de Gabriel Fauré. Orchestre symphonique de la radio-télévision espagnole. Petri Sakari, chef d'orchestre.

gabriel, fauré, fauré, gabriel, faure, redirect, here, other, people, with, that, surname, fauré, surname, writer, gabriel, faure, writer, gabriel, urbain, fauré, french, ɡabʁiɛl, yʁbɛ, fɔʁe, 1845, november, 1924, french, composer, organist, pianist, teacher, . Faure and Gabriel Faure redirect here For other people with that surname see Faure surname For the writer see Gabriel Faure writer Gabriel Urbain Faure French ɡabʁiɛl yʁbɛ fɔʁe 1 12 May 1845 4 November 1924 n 1 was a French composer organist pianist and teacher He was one of the foremost French composers of his generation and his musical style influenced many 20th century composers Among his best known works are his Pavane Requiem Sicilienne nocturnes for piano and the songs Apres un reve and Clair de lune Although his best known and most accessible compositions are generally his earlier ones Faure composed many of his most highly regarded works in his later years in a more harmonically and melodically complex style Faure in 1907 Faure was born into a cultured but not especially musical family His talent became clear when he was a young boy At the age of nine he was sent to the Ecole Niedermeyer music college in Paris where he was trained to be a church organist and choirmaster Among his teachers was Camille Saint Saens who became a lifelong friend After graduating from the college in 1865 Faure earned a modest living as an organist and teacher leaving him little time for composition When he became successful in his middle age holding the important posts of organist of the Eglise de la Madeleine and director of the Paris Conservatoire he still lacked time for composing he retreated to the countryside in the summer holidays to concentrate on composition By his last years he was recognised in France as the leading French composer of his day An unprecedented national musical tribute was held for him in Paris in 1922 headed by the president of the French Republic Outside France Faure s music took decades to become widely accepted except in Britain where he had many admirers during his lifetime Faure s music has been described as linking the end of Romanticism with the modernism of the second quarter of the 20th century When he was born Chopin was still composing and by the time of Faure s death jazz and the atonal music of the Second Viennese School were being heard The Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians which describes him as the most advanced composer of his generation in France notes that his harmonic and melodic innovations influenced the teaching of harmony for later generations During the last twenty years of his life he suffered from increasing deafness In contrast with the charm of his earlier music his works from this period are sometimes elusive and withdrawn in character and at other times turbulent and impassioned Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early years 1 2 Organist and composer 1 3 Middle years 1 4 Head of Paris Conservatoire 1 5 Last years and legacy 2 Music 2 1 Vocal music 2 2 Piano works 2 3 Orchestral and chamber works 2 4 Recordings 2 5 Modern assessment 3 Notes and references 3 1 Notes 3 2 References 4 Sources 5 External linksBiography EditEarly years Edit Faure was born in Pamiers Ariege in the south of France the fifth son and youngest of six children of Toussaint Honore Faure 1810 85 and Marie Antoinette Helene Lalene Laprade 1809 87 4 According to the biographer Jean Michel Nectoux the Faure family dates to the 13th century in that part of France 5 The family had at one time been substantial landowners but by the 19th century its means had become reduced The composer s paternal grandfather Gabriel was a butcher whose son became a schoolmaster 6 In 1829 Faure s parents married His mother was the daughter of a minor member of the nobility He was the only one of the six children to display musical talent his four brothers pursued careers in journalism politics the army and the civil service and his sister had a traditional life as the wife of a public servant 4 The young Faure was sent to live with a foster mother until he was four years old 7 When his father was appointed director of the Ecole Normale d Instituteurs a teacher training college at Montgauzy near Foix in 1849 Faure returned to live with his family 8 There was a chapel attached to the school which Faure recalled in the last year of his life I grew up a rather quiet well behaved child in an area of great beauty But the only thing I remember really clearly is the harmonium in that little chapel Every time I could get away I ran there and I regaled myself I played atrociously no method at all quite without technique but I do remember that I was happy and if that is what it means to have a vocation then it is a very pleasant thing 9 Faure as a student 1864 An old blind woman who came to listen and give the boy advice told his father of Faure s gift for music 7 In 1853 Simon Lucien Dufaur de Saubiac of the National Assembly n 2 heard Faure play and advised Toussaint Honore to send him to the Ecole de Musique Classique et Religieuse School of Classical and Religious Music better known as the Ecole Niedermeyer de Paris which Louis Niedermeyer was setting up in Paris 14 After reflecting for a year Faure s father agreed and took the nine year old boy to Paris in October 1854 15 Helped by a scholarship from the bishop of his home diocese Faure boarded at the school for 11 years 16 The regime was austere the rooms gloomy the food mediocre and the required uniform elaborate 10 n 3 The musical tuition however was excellent 10 Niedermeyer whose goal was to produce qualified organists and choirmasters focused on church music Faure s tutors were Clement Loret for organ Louis Dietsch for harmony Xavier Wackenthaler for counterpoint and fugue and Niedermeyer for piano plainsong and composition 15 When Niedermeyer died in March 1861 Camille Saint Saens took charge of piano studies and introduced contemporary music including that of Schumann Liszt and Wagner 18 Faure recalled in old age After allowing the lessons to run over he would go to the piano and reveal to us those works of the masters from which the rigorous classical nature of our programme of study kept us at a distance and who moreover in those far off years were scarcely known At the time I was 15 or 16 and from this time dates the almost filial attachment the immense admiration the unceasing gratitude I have had for him throughout my life 19 Saint Saens took great pleasure in his pupil s progress which he helped whenever he could Nectoux comments that at each step in Faure s career Saint Saens s shadow can effectively be taken for granted 20 The close friendship between them lasted until Saint Saens died sixty years later 2 Faure won many prizes while at the school including a premier prix in composition for the Cantique de Jean Racine Op 11 the earliest of his choral works to enter the regular repertory 15 He left the school in July 1865 as a Laureat in organ piano harmony and composition with a Maitre de chapelle diploma 21 Organist and composer Edit On leaving the Ecole Niedermeyer Faure was appointed organist at the Church of Saint Sauveur at Rennes in Brittany He took up the post in January 1866 22 During his four years at Rennes he supplemented his income by taking private pupils giving countless piano lessons 23 At Saint Saens s regular prompting he continued to compose but none of his works from this period survive 24 He was bored at Rennes and had an uneasy relationship with the parish priest who correctly doubted Faure s religious conviction 25 Faure was regularly seen stealing out during the sermon for a cigarette and in early 1870 when he turned up to play at Mass one Sunday still in his evening clothes having been out all night at a ball he was asked to resign 25 Almost immediately with the discreet aid of Saint Saens he secured the post of assistant organist at the church of Notre Dame de Clignancourt in the north of Paris 26 He remained there for only a few months On the outbreak of the Franco Prussian War in 1870 he volunteered for military service He took part in the action to raise the siege of Paris and saw action at Le Bourget Champigny and Creteil 27 He was awarded a Croix de Guerre 28 Staff and students of the Ecole Niedermeyer 1871 Faure in front row second from left Andre Messager in middle row second from right After France s defeat by Prussia there was a brief bloody conflict within Paris from March to May 1871 during the Commune 28 Faure escaped to Rambouillet where one of his brothers lived and then travelled to Switzerland where he took up a teaching post at the Ecole Niedermeyer which had temporarily relocated there to avoid the violence in Paris 28 His first pupil at the school was Andre Messager who became a lifelong friend and occasional collaborator 29 Faure s compositions from this period did not overtly reflect the turmoil and bloodshed Some of his colleagues including Saint Saens Gounod and Franck produced elegies and patriotic odes Faure did not but according to his biographer Jessica Duchen his music acquired a new sombreness a dark hued sense of tragedy evident mainly in his songs of this period including L Absent Seule and La Chanson du pecheur 30 When Faure returned to Paris in October 1871 he was appointed choirmaster at the Eglise Saint Sulpice under the composer and organist Charles Marie Widor 29 In the course of his duties he wrote several canticles and motets few of which have survived 31 During some services Widor and Faure improvised simultaneously at the church s two organs trying to catch each other out with sudden changes of key 30 Faure regularly attended Saint Saens s musical salons and those of Pauline Viardot to whom Saint Saens introduced him 15 Faure was a founding member of the Societe Nationale de Musique formed in February 1871 under the joint chairmanship of Romain Bussine and Saint Saens to promote new French music 32 Other members included Georges Bizet Emmanuel Chabrier Vincent d Indy Henri Duparc Cesar Franck Edouard Lalo and Jules Massenet 33 Faure became secretary of the society in 1874 34 Many of his works were first presented at the society s concerts 34 Faure in 1875 In 1874 Faure moved from Saint Sulpice to the Eglise de la Madeleine acting as deputy for the principal organist Saint Saens during the latter s many absences on tour 35 Some admirers of Faure s music have expressed regret that although he played the organ professionally for four decades he left no solo compositions for the instrument 36 He was renowned for his improvisations 37 and Saint Saens said of him that he was a first class organist when he wanted to be 38 Faure preferred the piano to the organ which he played only because it gave him a regular income 38 Duchen speculates that he positively disliked the organ possibly because for a composer of such delicacy of nuance and such sensuality the organ was simply not subtle enough 39 The year 1877 was significant for Faure both professionally and personally 40 In January his first violin sonata was performed at a Societe Nationale concert with great success marking a turning point in his composing career at the age of 31 40 Nectoux counts the work as the composer s first great masterpiece 41 In March Saint Saens retired from the Madeleine succeeded as organist by Theodore Dubois his choirmaster Faure was appointed to take over from Dubois 40 In July Faure became engaged to Pauline Viardot s daughter Marianne with whom he was deeply in love 40 To his great sorrow she broke off the engagement in November 1877 for reasons that are not clear 42 To distract Faure Saint Saens took him to Weimar and introduced him to Franz Liszt This visit gave Faure a liking for foreign travel which he indulged for the rest of his life 42 From 1878 he and Messager made trips abroad to see Wagner operas They saw Das Rheingold and Die Walkure at the Cologne Opera the complete Ring cycle at the Hofoper in Munich and at Her Majesty s Theatre in London and Die Meistersinger in Munich and at Bayreuth where they also saw Parsifal 43 They frequently performed as a party piece their joint composition the irreverent Souvenirs de Bayreuth This short up tempo piano work for four hands sends up themes from The Ring 44 Faure admired Wagner and had a detailed knowledge of his music 45 but he was one of the few composers of his generation not to come under Wagner s musical influence n 4 Middle years Edit Faure by John Singer Sargent 1889 In 1883 Faure married Marie Fremiet the daughter of a leading sculptor Emmanuel Fremiet 47 n 5 Nectoux comments that Marie was without beauty wit or a fortune narrow and cold 48 but records that in spite of everything Faure still felt a tenderness towards her The marriage was affectionate but Marie was in Nectoux s phrase a stay at home and she did not share her husband s wish to go out in the evenings 49 and became resentful of his frequent absences his dislike of domestic life horreur du domicile and his love affairs while she remained at home 47 Though Faure valued Marie as a friend and confidante writing to her often sometimes daily when away from home she did not share his passionate nature which found fulfilment elsewhere 50 Faure and his wife had two sons The first born in 1883 Emmanuel Faure Fremiet Marie insisted on combining her family name with Faure s 49 became a biologist of international reputation 51 The second son Philippe born in 1889 became a writer his works included histories plays and biographies of his father and grandfather 52 Contemporary accounts agree that Faure was extremely attractive to women n 6 in Duchen s phrase his conquests were legion in the Paris salons 54 After a romantic attachment to the singer Emma Bardac from around 1892 55 followed by another to the composer Adela Maddison 56 in 1900 Faure met the pianist Marguerite Hasselmans the daughter of Alphonse Hasselmans This led to a relationship which lasted for the rest of Faure s life He maintained her in a Paris apartment and she acted openly as his companion 57 Faure and Marie in 1889 To support his family Faure spent most of his time in running the daily services at the Madeleine and giving piano and harmony lessons 58 His compositions earned him a negligible amount because his publisher bought them outright paying him an average of 60 francs for a song and Faure received no royalties 59 During this period he wrote several large scale works in addition to many piano pieces and songs but he destroyed most of them after a few performances only retaining a few movements in order to re use motifs 15 Among the works surviving from this period is the Requiem begun in 1887 and revised and expanded over the years until its final version dating from 1901 60 After its first performance in 1888 the priest in charge told the composer We don t need these novelties the Madeleine s repertoire is quite rich enough 61 As a young man Faure had been very cheerful a friend wrote of his youthful even somewhat child like mirth 62 From his thirties he suffered bouts of depression which he described as spleen possibly first caused by his broken engagement and his lack of success as a composer 15 In 1890 a prestigious and remunerative commission to write an opera with lyrics by Paul Verlaine was aborted by the poet s drunken inability to deliver a libretto Faure was plunged into so deep a depression that his friends were seriously concerned about his health 63 Winnaretta de Scey Montbeliard n 7 always a good friend to Faure invited him to Venice where she had a palazzo on the Grand Canal 64 He recovered his spirits and began to compose again writing the first of his five Melodies de Venise to words by Verlaine whose poetry he continued to admire despite the operatic debacle 65 Emma Bardac About this time or shortly afterwards Faure s liaison with Emma Bardac began in Duchen s words for the first time in his late forties he experienced a fulfilling passionate relationship which extended over several years 66 His principal biographers all agree that this affair inspired a burst of creativity and a new originality in his music exemplified in the song cycle La bonne chanson 67 Faure wrote the Dolly Suite for piano duet between 1894 and 1897 and dedicated it to Bardac s daughter Helene known as Dolly 15 n 8 Some people suspected that Faure was Dolly s father but biographers including Nectoux and Duchen think it unlikely Faure s affair with Emma Bardac is thought to have begun after Dolly was born though there is no conclusive evidence either way 68 During the 1890s Faure s fortunes improved When Ernest Guiraud professor of composition at the Paris Conservatoire died in 1892 Saint Saens encouraged Faure to apply for the vacant post The faculty of the Conservatoire regarded Faure as dangerously modern and its head Ambroise Thomas blocked the appointment declaring Faure Never If he s appointed I resign 69 However Faure was appointed to another of Guiraud s posts inspector of the music conservatories in the French provinces 70 He disliked the prolonged travelling around the country that the work entailed but the post gave him a steady income and enabled him to give up teaching amateur pupils 71 Clockwise from top left Saint Saens Thomas Massenet Dubois In 1896 Ambroise Thomas died and Theodore Dubois took over as head of the Conservatoire Faure succeeded Dubois as chief organist of the Madeleine Dubois move had further repercussions Massenet professor of composition at the Conservatoire had expected to succeed Thomas but had overplayed his hand by insisting on being appointed for life 72 He was turned down and when Dubois was appointed instead Massenet resigned his professorship in fury 73 Faure was appointed in his place 74 He taught many young composers including Maurice Ravel Florent Schmitt Charles Koechlin Louis Aubert Jean Roger Ducasse George Enescu Paul Ladmirault Alfredo Casella and Nadia Boulanger 15 In Faure s view his students needed a firm grounding in the basic skills which he was happy to delegate to his capable assistant Andre Gedalge 75 His own part came in helping them make use of these skills in the way that suited each student s talents Roger Ducasse later wrote Taking up whatever the pupils were working on he would evoke the rules of the form at hand and refer to examples always drawn from the masters 76 Ravel always remembered Faure s open mindedness as a teacher Having received Ravel s String Quartet with less than his usual enthusiasm Faure asked to see the manuscript again a few days later saying I could have been wrong 77 The musicologist Henry Prunieres wrote What Faure developed among his pupils was taste harmonic sensibility the love of pure lines of unexpected and colorful modulations but he never gave them recipes for composing according to his style and that is why they all sought and found their own paths in many different and often opposed directions 78 Faure s works of the last years of the century include incidental music for the English premiere of Maurice Maeterlinck s Pelleas et Melisande 1898 and Promethee a lyric tragedy composed for the amphitheatre at Beziers Written for outdoor performance the work is scored for huge instrumental and vocal forces Its premiere in August 1900 was a great success and it was revived at Beziers the following year and in Paris in 1907 A version with orchestration for normal opera house sized forces was given at the Paris Opera in May 1917 and received more than forty performances in Paris thereafter n 9 From 1903 to 1921 Faure regularly wrote music criticism for Le Figaro a role in which he was not at ease Nectoux writes that Faure s natural kindness and broad mindedness predisposed him to emphasise the positive aspects of a work 15 Head of Paris Conservatoire Edit Maurice Ravel In 1905 a scandal erupted in French musical circles over the country s top musical prize the Prix de Rome Faure s pupil Ravel had been eliminated prematurely in his sixth attempt for this award and many believed that reactionary elements within the Conservatoire had played a part in it 80 Dubois who became the subject of much censure brought forward his retirement and stepped down at once 81 Appointed in his place and with the support of the French government Faure radically changed the administration and curriculum He appointed independent external judges to decide on admissions examinations and competitions a move which enraged faculty members who had given preferential treatment to their private pupils feeling themselves deprived of a considerable extra income many of them resigned 82 Faure was dubbed Robespierre by disaffected members of the old guard as he modernised and broadened the range of music taught at the Conservatoire As Nectoux puts it where Auber Halevy and especially Meyerbeer had reigned supreme it was now possible to sing an aria by Rameau or even some Wagner up to now a forbidden name within the Conservatoire s walls 83 The curriculum was broadened to range from Renaissance polyphony to the works of Debussy 83 Faure s new position left him better off financially However while he also became much more widely known as a composer running the Conservatoire left him with no more time for composition than when he was struggling to earn a living as an organist and piano teacher 84 As soon as the working year was over in the last days of July he would leave Paris and spend the two months until early October in a hotel usually by one of the Swiss lakes to concentrate on composition 85 His works from this period include his lyric opera Penelope 1913 and some of his most characteristic later songs e g the cycle La chanson d Eve Op 95 completed in 1910 and piano pieces Nocturnes Nos 9 11 Barcarolles Nos 7 11 written between 1906 and 1914 15 Faure at the turn of the century Faure was elected to the Institut de France in 1909 after his father in law and Saint Saens both long established members had canvassed strongly on his behalf He won the ballot by a narrow margin with 18 votes against 16 for the other candidate Widor 86 n 10 In the same year a group of young composers led by Ravel and Koechlin broke with the Societe Nationale de Musique which under the presidency of Vincent d Indy had become a reactionary organisation and formed a new group the Societe musicale independante While Faure accepted the presidency of this society he also remained a member of the older one and continued on the best of terms with d Indy his sole concern was the fostering of new music 86 In 1911 he oversaw the Conservatoire s move to new premises in the rue de Madrid 85 During this time Faure developed serious problems with his hearing Not only did he start to go deaf but sounds became distorted so that high and low notes sounded painfully out of tune to him 88 The turn of the 20th century saw a rise in the popularity of Faure s music in Britain and to a lesser extent in Germany Spain and Russia 89 He visited England frequently and an invitation to play at Buckingham Palace in 1908 opened many other doors in London and beyond 90 He was in London for the premiere of Elgar s First Symphony in 1908 and dined with the composer 91 Elgar later wrote to their mutual friend Frank Schuster that Faure was such a real gentleman the highest kind of Frenchman and I admired him greatly 92 Elgar tried to get Faure s Requiem put on at the Three Choirs Festival but it did not finally have its English premiere until 1937 nearly fifty years after its first performance in France 92 Composers from other countries also loved and admired Faure In the 1880s Tchaikovsky had thought him adorable 93 Albeniz and Faure were friends and correspondents until the former s early death in 1909 94 Richard Strauss sought his advice 95 and in Faure s last years the young American Aaron Copland was a devoted admirer 2 The outbreak of the First World War almost stranded Faure in Germany where he had gone for his annual composing retreat He managed to get from Germany into Switzerland and thence to Paris 96 He remained in France for the duration of the war When a group of French musicians led by Saint Saens tried to organise a boycott of German music Faure and Messager dissociated themselves from the idea though the disagreement did not affect their friendship with Saint Saens n 11 Faure did not recognise nationalism in music seeing in his art a language belonging to a country so far above all others that it is dragged down when it has to express feelings or individual traits that belong to any particular nation 99 Nonetheless he was aware that his own music was respected rather than loved in Germany In January 1905 visiting Frankfurt and Cologne for concerts of his music he had written The criticisms of my music have been that it s a bit cold and too well brought up There s no question about it French and German are two different things 100 Last years and legacy Edit In 1920 at the age of 75 Faure retired from the Conservatoire because of his increasing deafness and frailty 15 In that year he received the Grand Croix of the Legion d honneur an honour rare for a musician In 1922 the president of the republic Alexandre Millerand led a public tribute to Faure a national hommage described in The Musical Times as a splendid celebration at the Sorbonne in which the most illustrious French artists participated which brought him great joy It was a poignant spectacle indeed that of a man present at a concert of his own works and able to hear not a single note He sat gazing before him pensively and in spite of everything grateful and content 88 National hommage to Faure 1922 Faure and President Millerand are in the box between the statues Faure suffered from poor health in his later years brought on in part by heavy smoking Despite this he remained available to young composers including members of Les Six most of whom were devoted to him 88 n 12 Nectoux writes In old age he attained a kind of serenity without losing any of his remarkable spiritual vitality but rather removed from the sensualism and the passion of the works he wrote between 1875 and 1895 15 In his last months Faure struggled to complete his String Quartet Twenty years earlier he had been the dedicatee of Ravel s String Quartet Ravel and others urged Faure to compose one of his own He refused for many years on the grounds that it was too difficult When he finally decided to write it he did so in trepidation telling his wife I ve started a Quartet for strings without piano This is a genre which Beethoven in particular made famous and causes all those who are not Beethoven to be terrified of it 102 He worked on the piece for a year finishing it on 11 September 1924 less than two months before he died working long hours towards the end to complete it 103 The quartet was premiered after his death 104 he declined an offer to have it performed privately for him in his last days as his hearing had deteriorated to the point where musical sounds were horribly distorted in his ear 105 Faure died in Paris from pneumonia on 4 November 1924 at the age of 79 He was given a state funeral at the Eglise de la Madeleine and is buried in the Passy Cemetery in Paris 106 After Faure s death the Conservatoire abandoned his radicalism and became resistant to new trends in music with Faure s own harmonic practice being held up as the farthest limit of modernity beyond which students should not go 107 His successor Henri Rabaud director of the Conservatoire from 1922 to 1941 declared modernism is the enemy 108 The generation of students born between the wars rejected this outdated premise turning for inspiration to Bartok the Second Viennese School and the latest works of Stravinsky 107 In a centenary tribute in 1945 the musicologist Leslie Orrey wrote in The Musical Times More profound than Saint Saens more varied than Lalo more spontaneous than d Indy more classic than Debussy Gabriel Faure is the master par excellence of French music the perfect mirror of our musical genius Perhaps when English musicians get to know his work better these words of Roger Ducasse will seem not over praise but no more than his due 109 Music EditMain article List of compositions by Gabriel Faure Manuscript page of the Requiem Aaron Copland wrote that although Faure s works can be divided into the usual early middle and late periods there is no such radical difference between his first and last manners as is evident with many other composers Copland found premonitions of late Faure in even the earliest works and traces of the early Faure in the works of his old age The themes harmonies form have remained essentially the same but with each new work they have all become more fresh more personal more profound 2 When Faure was born Berlioz and Chopin were still composing the latter was among Faure s early influences 110 In his later years Faure developed compositional techniques that foreshadowed the atonal music of Schoenberg 111 and later still drew discreetly on the techniques of jazz 112 Duchen writes that early works such as the Cantique de Jean Racine are in the tradition of French nineteenth century romanticism yet his late works are as modern as any of the works of his pupils 113 Influences on Faure particularly in his early work included not only Chopin but Mozart and Schumann The authors of The Record Guide 1955 Sackville West and Shawe Taylor wrote that Faure learnt restraint and beauty of surface from Mozart tonal freedom and long melodic lines from Chopin and from Schumann the sudden felicities in which his development sections abound and those codas in which whole movements are briefly but magically illuminated 114 His work was based on the strong understanding of harmonic structures that he gained at the Ecole Niedermeyer from Niedermeyer s successor Gustave Lefevre 15 Lefevre wrote the book Traite d harmonie Paris 1889 in which he sets out a harmonic theory that differs significantly from the classical theory of Rameau no longer outlawing certain chords as dissonant n 13 By using unresolved mild discords and colouristic effects Faure anticipated the techniques of Impressionist composers 115 In contrast with his harmonic and melodic style which pushed the bounds for his time Faure s rhythmic motives tended to be subtle and repetitive with little to break the flow of the line although he used discreet syncopations similar to those found in Brahms s works 15 Copland referred to him as the Brahms of France 2 The music critic Jerry Dubins suggests that Faure represents the link between the late German Romanticism of Brahms and the French Impressionism of Debussy 116 To Sackville West and Shawe Taylor Faure s later works do not display the easy charm of his earlier music the luscious romantic harmony which had always been firmly supported by a single tonality later gave way to a severely monochrome style full of enharmonic shifts and creating the impression of several tonal centres simultaneously employed 117 Vocal music Edit Faure is regarded as one of the masters of the French art song or melodie 15 Ravel wrote in 1922 that Faure had saved French music from the dominance of the German Lied 118 Two years later the critic Samuel Langford wrote of Faure More surely almost than any writer in the world he commanded the faculty to create a song all of a piece and with a sustained intensity of mood which made it like a single thought 119 In a 2011 article the pianist and writer Roy Howat and the musicologist Emily Kilpatrick wrote His devotion to the melodie spans his career from the ever fresh Le papillon et la fleur of 1861 to the masterly cycle L horizon chimerique composed sixty years and more than a hundred songs later Faure s songs are now core repertoire for students and professionals sung in conservatories and recital halls throughout the world 120 In Copland s view the early songs written in the 1860s and 1870s under the influence of Gounod except for isolated songs such as Apres un reve or Au bord de l eau show little sign of the artist to come With the second volume of the sixty collected songs written during the next two decades Copland judged came the first mature examples of the real Faure He instanced Les berceaux Les roses d Ispahan and especially Clair de lune as so beautiful so perfect that they have even penetrated to America and drew attention to less well known melodies such as Le secret Nocturne and Les presents 2 Faure also composed a number of song cycles Cinq melodies de Venise Op 58 1891 was described by Faure as a novel kind of song suite in its use of musical themes recurring over the cycle For the later cycle La bonne chanson Op 61 1894 there were five such themes according to Faure 121 He also wrote that La bonne chanson was his most spontaneous composition with Emma Bardac singing back to him each day s newly written material 70 Among later works were cycles drawn from the poems of Charles van Lerberghe La chanson d Eve 1910 and Le jardin clos 1914 122 Cantique de Jean Racine source source A shorter choral work by Faure Problems playing this file See media help The Requiem Op 48 first performed in 1888 was not composed to the memory of a specific person but in Faure s words for the pleasure of it It has been described as a lullaby of death because of its predominantly gentle tone 123 Faure omitted the Dies irae though reference to the day of judgment appears in the Libera me which like Verdi he added to the normal liturgical text 124 Faure revised the Requiem over the years and a number of different performing versions are now in use from the earliest for small forces to the final revision with full orchestra 125 Faure s operas have not found a place in the regular repertoire Promethee is the more neglected of the two with only a handful of performances in more than a century 126 Copland considered Penelope 1913 a fascinating work and one of the best operas written since Wagner he noted however that the music is as a whole distinctly non theatrical 2 The work uses leitmotifs and the two main roles call for voices of heroic quality but these are the only ways in which the work is Wagnerian In Faure s late style tonality is stretched hard without breaking 127 On the rare occasions when the piece has been staged critical opinion has generally praised the musical quality of the score but has varied as to the dramatic effectiveness of the work When the opera was first presented in London in 1970 in a student production by the Royal Academy of Music Peter Heyworth wrote A score that offers rich rewards to an attentive ear can none the less fail to cut much ice in the theatre Most of the music is too recessive to be theatrically effective 128 However after a 2006 production at the Wexford Festival Ian Fox wrote Faure s Penelope is a true rarity and although some lovely music was anticipated it was a surprise how sure the composer s theatrical touch was 129 Piano works Edit Main article Piano music of Gabriel Faure Faure s major sets of piano works are thirteen nocturnes thirteen barcarolles six impromptus and four valses caprices These sets were composed across the decades of his career and display the change in his style from uncomplicated youthful charm to a final enigmatic but sometimes fiery introspection by way of a turbulent period in his middle years 2 His other notable piano pieces including shorter works or collections composed or published as a set are Romances sans paroles Ballade in F major Mazurka in B major Theme et variations in C major and Huit pieces breves For piano duet Faure composed the Dolly Suite and together with his friend and former pupil Andre Messager an exuberant parody of Wagner in the short suite Souvenirs de Bayreuth 130 The piano works often use arpeggiated figures with the melody interspersed between the two hands and include finger substitutions natural for organists These aspects make them daunting for some pianists Even a virtuoso like Liszt said that he found Faure s music hard to play 43 n 14 The early piano works are clearly influenced by Chopin 133 An even greater influence was Schumann whose piano music Faure loved more than any other 134 In Copland s view it was with the sixth Nocturne that Faure fully emerged from any predecessor s shadow 2 The pianist Alfred Cortot said There are few pages in all music comparable to these 2 The critic Bryce Morrison has noted that pianists frequently prefer to play the charming earlier piano works such as the Impromptu No 2 rather than the later piano works which express such private passion and isolation such alternating anger and resignation that listeners are left uneasy 135 In his piano music as in most of his works Faure shunned virtuosity in favour of the classical lucidity often associated with the French 115 He was unimpressed by purely virtuoso pianists saying the greater they are the worse they play me 136 Orchestral and chamber works Edit Faure was not greatly interested in orchestration and on occasion asked his former students such as Jean Roger Ducasse and Charles Koechlin to orchestrate his concert and theatre works In Nectoux s words Faure s generally sober orchestral style reflects a definite aesthetic attitude The idea of timbre was not a determining one in Faure s musical thinking 137 He was not attracted by flamboyant combinations of tone colours which he thought either self indulgent or a disguise for lack of real musical invention 15 He told his students that it should be possible to produce an orchestration without resorting to glockenspiels celestas xylophones bells or electrical instruments 138 Debussy admired the spareness of Faure s orchestration finding in it the transparency he strove for in his own 1913 ballet Jeux Poulenc by contrast described Faure s orchestration as a leaden overcoat instrumental mud 139 Faure s best known orchestral works are the suites Masques et bergamasques based on music for a dramatic entertainment or divertissement comique which he orchestrated himself 140 Dolly orchestrated by Henri Rabaud 141 and Pelleas et Melisande which draws on incidental music for Maeterlinck s play the stage version was orchestrated by Koechlin but Faure himself reworked the orchestration for the published suite 138 Piece for Oboe and Harp source source Arranged for bassoon and piano performed by Kathleen Walsh bassoon and Amy Crane piano Elegie source source Performed by Hans Goldstein cello and Eli Kalman piano Fantaisie source source Performed by Alex Murray flute and Martha Goldstein piano Problems playing these files See media help In the chamber repertoire his two piano quartets in C minor and G minor particularly the former are among Faure s better known works 142 His other chamber music includes two piano quintets two cello sonatas two violin sonatas a piano trio and a string quartet Copland writing in 1924 before the string quartet was finished held the second quintet in C minor Opus 115 to be Faure s masterpiece a pure well of spirituality extremely classic as far removed as possible from the romantic temperament 2 Other critics have taken a less favourable view The Record Guide commented The ceaseless flow and restricted colour scheme of Faure s last manner as exemplified in this Quintet need very careful management if they are not to become tedious 142 Faure s last work the String Quartet has been described by critics in Gramophone magazine as an intimate meditation on the last things 143 and an extraordinary work by any standards ethereal and other worldly with themes that seem constantly to be drawn skywards 144 Recordings Edit Faure made piano rolls of his music for several companies between 1905 and 1913 n 15 Well over a hundred recordings of Faure s music were made between 1898 and 1905 mostly of songs with a few short chamber works by performers including the singers Jean Note and Pol Plancon and players such as Jacques Thibaud and Alfred Cortot 146 By the 1920s a range of Faure s more popular songs were on record including Apres un reve sung by Olga Haley 147 and Automne and Clair de lune sung by Ninon Vallin 148 In the 1930s better known performers recorded Faure pieces including Georges Thill En priere 149 and Jacques Thibaud and Alfred Cortot Violin Sonata No 1 and Berceuse 150 The Sicilienne from Pelleas et Melisande was recorded in 1938 151 By the 1940s there were a few more Faure works in the catalogues A survey by John Culshaw in December 1945 singled out recordings of piano works played by Kathleen Long including the Nocturne No 6 Barcarolle No 2 the Theme et Variations Op 73 and the Ballade Op 19 in its orchestral version conducted by Boyd Neel the Requiem conducted by Ernest Bourmauck and seven songs sung by Maggie Teyte 152 Faure s music began to appear more frequently in the record companies releases in the 1950s The Record Guide 1955 listed the Piano Quartet No 1 Piano Quintet No 2 the String Quartet both Violin Sonatas the Cello Sonata No 2 two new recordings of the Requiem and the complete song cycles La bonne chanson and La chanson d Eve 153 In the LP and particularly the CD era the record companies have built up a substantial catalogue of Faure s music performed by French and non French musicians Several modern recordings of Faure s music have come to public notice as prize winners in annual awards organised by Gramophone and the BBC n 16 Sets of his major orchestral works have been recorded under conductors including Michel Plasson 1981 154 and Yan Pascal Tortelier 1996 155 Faure s main chamber works have all been recorded with players including the Ysaye Quartet Domus Paul Tortelier Arthur Grumiaux and Joshua Bell 156 The complete piano works have been recorded by Kathryn Stott 1995 157 and Paul Crossley 1984 85 158 with substantial sets of the major piano works from Germaine Thyssens Valentin 159 Jean Philippe Collard 1982 84 160 Pascal Roge 1990 161 and Kun Woo Paik 2002 162 Faure s songs have all been recorded for CD including a complete set 2005 anchored by the accompanist Graham Johnson with soloists Jean Paul Fouchecourt Felicity Lott John Mark Ainsley and Jennifer Smith among others 163 The Requiem and the shorter choral works are also well represented on disc 164 Penelope has been recorded twice with casts headed by Regine Crespin in 1956 and Jessye Norman in 1981 conducted respectively by Desire Emile Inghelbrecht and Charles Dutoit 165 Promethee has not been recorded in full but extensive excerpts were recorded under Roger Norrington 1980 166 Modern assessment Edit A 2001 article on Faure in Baker s Biographical Dictionary of Musicians concludes thus Faure s stature as a composer is undiminished by the passage of time He developed a musical idiom all his own by subtle application of old modes he evoked the aura of eternally fresh art by using unresolved mild discords and special coloristic effects he anticipated procedures of Impressionism in his piano works he shunned virtuosity in favor of the Classical lucidity of the French masters of the clavecin the precisely articulated melodic line of his songs is in the finest tradition of French vocal music His great Requiem and his Elegie for Cello and Piano have entered the general repertoire 115 Faure s biographer Nectoux writes in the Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians that Faure is widely regarded as the greatest master of French song and that alongside the melodies the chamber works rank as Faure s most important contribution to music 15 The critic Robert Orledge writes His genius was one of synthesis he reconciled such opposing elements as modality and tonality anguish and serenity seduction and force within a single non eclectic style as in the Pelleas et Melisande suite his symphonic masterpiece The quality of constant renewal within an apparently limited range is a remarkable facet of his genius and the spare elliptical style of his single String Quartet suggests that his intensely self disciplined style was still developing at the time of his death 167 Notes and references EditNotes Edit Some early sources including Copland say that Faure was born on 13 May 2 the birth register for that date reads born yesterday and authorities including Nectoux Jones and Duchen give 12 May as the date of birth 3 Sources differ on Dufaur de Saubiac s position at the Assembly Jones identifies him as the parliamentary deputy for the departement 10 as does Johnson 11 Orledge similarly identifies him as the member of the Assembly for Ariege 12 Nectoux describes him as a senior civil servant in the Chamber of Deputies or Palais legislatif as it was known in the Second Empire 7 Duchen does not mention the Assembly referring to Dufaur de Saubiac as a local man who worked as an archivist in Paris 13 A later writer describes a photo of Faure as a boy wearing the school uniform and looking not unlike Arthur Sullivan as one of the children of the Chapel Royal 17 Faure liked some of Wagner s operas more than others He loved Die Meistersinger Parsifal and the Ring was lukewarm about Tannhauser and Lohengrin and detested Tristan und Isolde Duchen speculates that the excess in sentiment and length of the last was fundamentally contrary to Faure s aesthetic sensibilities 46 Some sources put an acute accent on the first e of the surname but Marie Fremiet s letters show that she did not do so The spelling without the accent is followed by Nectoux Jones and Duchen Alfredo Casella one of his pupils wrote that Faure had the large languid and sensual eyes of an impenitent Casanova It was rumoured in Parisian musical circles that some of Faure s most talented pupils may have been his illegitimate children The rumours were never substantiated 53 Better known by her original name Winnaretta Singer and her later title the Princesse de Polignac In the UK the first piece Berceuse from the Dolly Suite became Faure s best known piece to several generations of children it was used as the closing music for the BBC Home Service radio programme Listen with Mother which was broadcast from 1950 to 1982 The 1907 Paris premiere was staged at the Hippodrome but the acoustics were so bad that the second performance was moved to the Opera The 1917 revised orchestration was made by Roger Ducasse at Faure s request 79 Widor was elected the following year 87 Faure and Messager were privately concerned that their old friend was in danger of looking foolish with his excess of patriotism 97 and also his growing tendency to denounce the works of rising young composers as in his condemnation of Debussy s En blanc et noir We must at all costs bar the door of the Institut against a man capable of such atrocities they should be put next to the cubist pictures 98 Poulenc was the exception among Les Six in disliking Faure s music Nectoux comments that this seems strange because of all the members of Les Six Poulenc is the nearest to Faure in the limpid clarity and singing quality of his own writing in his charm 101 In particular seventh and ninth chords were no longer considered dissonant and the mediant could be altered without changing the mode 15 Faure visited Liszt in Zurich in July 1882 The elder composer played one of his own compositions and then began Faure s Ballade in F major After a few bars he said I ve run out of fingers and asked Faure to play the rest of the piece to him Nectoux and Duchen speculate that Liszt may have had difficulty in reading the manuscript or wanted to hear how Faure himself would play 131 Jones and Morrison simply state that Liszt found the music too difficult 132 The rolls of the Romance sans paroles No 3 Barcarolle No 1 Prelude No 3 Pavane Nocturne No 3 Sicilienne Theme et variations and Valses caprices Nos 1 3 and 4 survive and several rolls have been re recorded on disc 145 Among these are from Gramophone Gerard Souzay Best Historical Vocal 1991 Piano Quartets Domus Chamber 1986 Piano Quintets Domus Chamber 1995 String Quartet Debussy Ravel Quatuor Ebene Recording of the Year 2009 Nocturnes Germaine Thyssens Valentin Historic Reissue 2002 Requiem Rutter et al Choral 1985 Among BBC Awards String Quartet Franck Dante Quartet Chamber 2009 References Edit English approximation of the surname UK ˈ f ɔːr eɪ ˈ f ɒr US f oʊ ˈ r eɪ f ɔː Wells John C 2008 Longman Pronunciation Dictionary 3rd ed Longman ISBN 9781405881180 a b c d e f g h i j k Copland Aaron Gabriel Faure a Neglected Master The Musical Quarterly October 1924 pp 573 586 subscription required Nectoux 1991 p 3 Jones p 15 and Duchen p 12 a b Duchen p 13 Nectoux 1991 p 3 Duchen p 12 a b c Nectoux 1991 p 4 Duchen p 2 Faure in 1924 quoted in Duchen p 14 a b c Jones p 15 Johnson p 27 Orledge pp 5 6 Duchen p 15 Nectoux 1991 p 5 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Nectoux Jean Michel Faure Gabriel Urbain Grove Online Oxford Music Online accessed 21 August 2010 subscription required Nectoux p 6 Henderson A M Memories of Some Distinguished French Organists Faure The Musical Times September 1937 pp 817 819 subscription required Jones p 16 Faure in 1922 quoted in Nectoux 1984 pp 1 2 Nectoux 1984 p 2 Nectoux 1991 p 502 and Jones p 20 Nectoux 1991 p 12 Nectoux 1991 p 508 Nectoux 1991 p 15 a b Jones p 21 Duchen p 28 Nectoux 1991 p 503 a b c Duchen p 31 a b Jones p 27 a b Duchen p 32 Nectoux p 18 Vallas p 135 Jones p 28 and Grove a b Jones p 28 Jones p 29 See for example Henderson A M Memories of Some Distinguished French Organists Faure The Musical Times September 1937 pp 817 819 subscription required and Orrey Leslie Gabriel Faure 1845 1924 The Musical Times May 1945 pp 137 139 subscription required Henderson A M Memories of Some Distinguished French Organists Faure The Musical Times September 1937 pp 817 819 subscription required a b Nectoux 1991 p 41 Duchen p 17 a b c d Jones p 33 Nectoux 1991 p 80 a b Jones p 50 a b Jones p 51 Wagstaff John and Andrew Lamb Messager Andre Grove Music Online Oxford Music Online accessed 14 August 2010 subscription required Nectoux 1991 p 39 Duchen p 58 a b Jones p 52 Nectoux p 37 a b Nectoux p 38 Duchen p 66 Willmer E N Emmanuel Faure Fremiet 1883 1971 Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society Vol 18 November 1972 pp 187 221 subscription required Philippe Faure Fremiet WorldCat accessed 2 April 2012 Duchen p 63 Duchen Jessica A still small voice The Guardian 24 November 1995 p A12 Nectoux 1991 p 181 Orledge pp 16 17 Nectoux 1991 pp 282 285 Duchen p 69 Nectoux 1991 p 26 Oliver pp 215 217 Duchen p 80 Jones p 31 Duchen pp 95 97 Orledge p 14 Orledge p 15 and Duchen pp 98 99 Duchen p 105 Duchen p 105 Johnson p 253 Jones p 68 Nectoux p 185 and Orledge p 15 Nectoux p 181 and Duchen p 108 Nectoux 1991 p 224 a b Orledge p 15 Jones p 65 Jones p 78 Nectoux 1984 pp 224 225 Orledge p 16 Nectoux 1991 p 246 Nectoux 1991 p 307 Nichols p 103 Prunieres Henry quoted in Copland Copland spells the given name as Henri and uses the older English term receipts for recipes Nectoux 1991 p 370 Orledge p 21 Nectoux p 267 Woldu Gail Hilson Gabriel Faure directeur du Conservatoire les reformes de 1905 Revue de Musicologie T 70e No 2e 1984 pp 199 228 Societe Francaise de Musicologie French text subscription required a b Nectoux 1991 p 269 Jones p 110 a b Nectoux 1991 p 270 a b Jones p 133 Near p vi a b c Landormy Paul and M D Herter Gabriel Faure 1845 1924 The Musical Quarterly Vol 17 No 3 July 1931 pp 293 301 subscription required Nectoux 1991 p 278 Nectoux 1991 p 283 Moore p 547 a b Anderson p 156 Anderson Robert Review Insights The Musical Times February 1985 pp 93 94 subscription required Jones p 10 Jones pp 124 125 Jones pp 160 161 Jones pp 162 165 Nectoux 1984 p 108 Caballero Carlo Review Gabriel Faure A Musical Life 19th Century Music Vol 16 No 1 Summer 1992 pp 85 92 subscription required Nectoux 1991 p 277 Nectoux p 434 Jones p 202 Perreau p 3 Jones p 192 Nectoux p 292 Duchen p 212 a b Nectoux 1991 p 469 Nichols Roger Henri Rabaud BBC Music accessed 1 April 2012 Orrey Leslie Gabriel Faure 1845 1924 The Musical Times May 1945 pp 137 139 subscription required Orledge p 59 and Nectoux 1991 p 48 Nectoux 1991 p 415 Nectoux 1991 p 401 Duchen p 6 Sackville West pp 263 264 a b c Slonimsky Nicholas Faure Gabriel Urbain Baker s Biographical Dictionary of Musicians Schirmer Reference New York 2001 accessed 8 September 2010 subscription required Dubins Jerry Review Fanfare May 2006 pp 245 246 Sackville West p 264 Ravel p 23 Gabriel Faure The Manchester Guardian 5 November 1924 p 16 Howat Roy and Emily Kilpatrick Editorial Challenges in the Early Songs of Gabriel Faure Notes Quarterly Journal of the Music Library Association December 2011 pp 239 283 Orledge pp 78 81 Johnson p 329 Payne Anthony Sweet lullaby of death The Independent 5 April 1997 Rosen pp 60 74 Orledge Robert Faure Revised The Musical Times May 1980 p 327 subscription required Duchen p 197 Murray p 120 Heyworth Peter Neglected Penelope The Observer 29 November 1970 p 78 Fox Ian Opera in Review Opera Canada January 2006 pp 45 47 Duchen pp 222 224 Nectoux 1991 p 51 and Duchen p 61 Jones p 51 and Morrison p 11 Nectoux 1991 p 49 Nectoux 1991 p 43 Morrison p 7 Nectoux 1991 p 379 Nectoux 1991 p 259 a b Duchen p 132 Nectoux 1991 p 258 Duchen p 196 Duchen p 226 a b Sackville West p 265 Nichols Roger Faure and Ravel Gramophone August 2000 p 69 Cowan Rob Debussy Faure Ravel Gramophone December 2008 p 97 Nectoux 1991 p 45 Centre for the History and Analysis of Recorded Music accessed 3 May 2012 Vocalion The Gramophone April 1925 p 63 Ninon Vallin The Gramophone November 1929 p 19 Georges Thill The Gramophone December 1937 p 18 Review The Gramophone July 1932 p 11 and Chamber Music The Gramophone December 1932 p 19 Anderson W R Second Reviews The Gramophone July 1938 p 24 Culshaw John The Return of Faure The Gramophone December 1945 p 15 Sackville West pp 265 268 EMI Records catalogue number 5 86564 2 Chandos Records catalogue number Chan 9412 March pp 450 453 Hyperion Records catalogue number DA 66911 4 CRD Records catalogue number 5006 EMI Records digital remastering from 1956 to 1965 Testament 2002 issued under license from EMI Records Ltd EMI Records catalogue number 5 85261 2 Decca Records catalogue number 425 606 40 Decca Records catalogue number 470 246 2 Hyperion Records catalogue numbers CDA67333 CDA67336 March pp 455 456 Discoreale Records catalogue number DR 10012 4 and Erato Records catalogue number STU71386 Aristocrat Records catalogue number 7466 lE5531 Orledge Robert Faure Gabriel Urbain The Oxford Companion to Music Oxford Music Online accessed 26 September 2010 subscription required Sources EditAnderson Robert 1993 Elgar London J M Dent ISBN 0 460 86054 2 Duchen Jessica 2000 Gabriel Faure London Phaidon ISBN 0 7148 3932 9 Johnson Graham Richard Stokes 2009 Gabriel Faure The Songs and Their Poets Farnham Kent England and Burlington Vt Ashgate ISBN 0 7546 5960 7 Jones J Barrie 1989 Gabriel Faure A Life in Letters London B T Batsford ISBN 0 7134 5468 7 March Ivan ed 2007 The Penguin Guide to Recorded Classical Music 2008 London Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 103336 3 Moore Jerrold Northrop 1987 Elgar A Creative Life Oxford Oxford Paperbacks ISBN 0 19 284014 2 Morrison Bryce 1995 Notes toThe Complete Piano Music of Gabriel Faure London Hyperion Records OCLC 224489565 Murray David 1997 Faure Gabriel In Amanda Holden ed The Penguin Opera Guide London Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 051385 X Nectoux Jean Michel 1984 Gabriel Faure His Life Through Letters Translated by J A Underwood London Boyars ISBN 0 7145 2768 8 Nectoux Jean Michel 1991 Gabriel Faure A Musical Life Roger Nichols trans Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 23524 3 Near John R Charles Marie Widor Symphonie pour orgue et orchestre opus 42 bis Middleton A R Editions ISBN 0 89579 515 9 Nichols Roger 1987 Ravel Remembered London Faber and Faber ISBN 0 571 14986 3 Oliver Michael 1991 Faure Requiem In Alan Blyth ed Choral Music on Record Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 36309 8 Orledge Robert 1979 Gabriel Faure London Eulenburg Books ISBN 0 903873 40 0 Perreau Stephan 2000 Notes toRavel and Faure String Quartets Hong Kong Naxos Records OCLC 189791192 Ravel Maurice 1922 Les Melodies de Gabriel Faure In Henry Prunieres ed Hommage musical a Faure in French Paris La revue musicale OCLC 26757829 Rosen David 1995 Verdi Requiem Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 39767 7 Sackville West Edward Desmond Shawe Taylor 1955 The Record Guide London Collins OCLC 500373060 Vallas Leon 1951 Cesar Franck Translated by Hubert Foss London Harrap OCLC 910827 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gabriel Faure Gabriel Faure MIDI files Kunst der Fuge site Free scores by Gabriel Faure at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP Free scores by Gabriel Faure in the Choral Public Domain Library ChoralWiki Free scores at the Mutopia Project Oeuvres completes pour orgue J S Bach revision par Gabriel Faure From Sibley Music Library Digital Scores Collection Septuor pour trompette deux violons alto violoncelle contre basse et piano op 65 par C Saint Saens a 4 mains par G Faure From Sibley Music Library Digital Scores Collection Gabriel Faure A Research and Information Guide by Edward R Phillips Requiem op 48 de Gabriel Faure Orchestre symphonique de la radio television espagnole Petri Sakari chef d orchestre Portals Classical music Opera Biography Music Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gabriel Faure amp oldid 1127830472, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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