- Marios Varvoglis
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Marios Varvoglis (Greek: Μάριος Βάρβογλης) (10 December 1885 – 30 July 1967) was a Greek composer of the Modern Era. He studied music at the Conservatoire de Paris and the Schola Cantorum with Leroux, Georges Caussade, d'Indy and others. He remained in Montparnasse, Paris until 1922 and he maintained close relations with artistic circles that included Casella, Ravel, Varèse and Modigliani, whose last painting was a portrait of Varvoglis. After 1920 he taught at the Athens Conservatory and he became active as a music critic and conductor. He was persecuted for his liberal political views and, after the war, he was imprisoned in a British concentration camp.
As a composer, he belonged to the Greek national school but the French influence in the style and structure of his works is obvious. Varvoglis's works include:
Stage
- St. Barbara (1912)
- The Afternoon of Love (1944)
- Agamemnon (Aeschylus; 1932)
- The Persians (Aeschylus; 1934)
- The Birds (Aristophanes; 1942)
- Medea (Euripides; 1942)
- The Oath of the Dead (Zacharias Papantoniou; 1938)
Orchestral works
- The Feast (1906-9)
- Pastoral suite for strings (1912)
- Capriccio (1914)
- Canon, Chorale and Fugue on BACH (1930)
- Prelude, Chorale and Fugue on BACH (1937)
- Meditation for strings (1938)
- Laurels and Cypresses (1950)
- Symphonic poem Behind the Barbed Wire Fence (1945)
Chamber
- Doll's Serenade (1905)
- Pastoral Suite (1912)
- Hommage a César Franck (violin and piano; 1922)
- Trio for strings (1938)
- Piano Trio (1943)
- Prelude and Fugue on a Byzantine Theme (1953)
Piano
- Children's Hour, 14 pieces (1930)
- Greek Rhapsody (1922)
- Sonatina (1927)
Other
- songs
Sources
- The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians
Categories:- 1885 births
- 1967 deaths
- Greek composers
- Greek conductors (music)
- Greek musicians
- European composer stubs
- Greek people stubs
- Greek musician stubs
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