- Albert Roussel
.
Biography
Born in
Tourcoing , France, Roussel's earliest interest was not in music butmathematics . He spent a time in the French Navy, and in 1889 and 1890 he served on the crew of the frigate "Iphigénie". These travels affected him artistically, as many of his musical works would reflect his interest in far off, exotic places.After resigning from the Navy in 1894 he began to study music seriously with
Eugène Gigout , then continuing his studies until 1908 at theSchola Cantorum (one of his teachers there wasVincent D'Indy ). While studying, he was also busy teaching; his students included Satie and the youngEdgard Varèse .During
World War I he served—as didErnest Hemingway —as an ambulance driver on the Western Front. Following the war, he bought a summer house inNormandy , where he devoted most of his time to composition.Roussel was by temperament a classicist. While his early work is strongly influenced by
impressionism , he eventually found a personal style which was more formal in design, with a strong rhythmic drive, and with a more distinct liking forfunctional tonality than is evident in the work of his more famous contemporaries (for instance Debussy, Ravel, Satie, and Stravinsky). Roussel's training at the Schola Cantorum, with its emphasis on rigorous academic models such as Palestrina and Bach, left its mark on his mature style, which is characterized by contrapuntal textures. While he has been criticized for his heavyorchestration al style, that may be due to an expected similarity to the subtle and nuanced style of his countrymen, an aesthetic which he did not fully share; compared to the lush German romantic orchestral tradition, it could hardly be called heavy at all.Roussel was also interested in
jazz , and wrote a piano-vocal composition entitled "Jazz dans la nuit", which makes an interesting contrast to some of the other jazz-inspired compositions by French composers at the same time (compare it, for example, with the second movement of the Ravel "Violin Sonata", orDarius Milhaud 's "La Creation du Monde").Roussel's most important works are the ballets "Le festin de l'araignée", "
Bacchus et Ariane ", and "Aeneas" and the four symphonies (of which the Third, in G minor, and the Fourth, in A major, are masterpieces which epitomize his mature neoclassical style). His other works include numerous ballets, orchestralsuite s, apiano concerto , a concertino for cello and orchestra, a psalm setting for chorus and orchestra, incidental music for the theatre, and muchchamber music , solo piano music, and songs. He died in the town ofRoyan , in Western France, in 1937, the same year that his countrymenMaurice Ravel andGabriel Pierné died.Arturo Toscanini included the suite from the ballet "Le festin de l'araignée" in one of his broadcast concerts with theNBC Symphony Orchestra .Georges Prêtre recorded this same music with the Orchestra National de France for EMI in 1986.Works
tage
*"Aeneas", ballet
*"Bacchus et Ariane ", ballet in two acts. f.p. Paris Opéra, 22 May 1931
*"Le festin de l'araignée", ballet in one act. f.p. 3 April 1913
*"Padmâvatî", opera in 2 acts (1913–18, Louis Laloy, after T.-M. Pavie). f.p. Paris Opéra, 1 June 1923
* "Sarabande" (1927; for the children's ballet "L'Éventail de Jeanne ", to which ten French composers each contributed a dance)Orchestral
*Symphony No. 1 in D minor "The Poem of the Forest"
*Symphony No. 2 in B-flat major
*Symphony No. 3 in G minor
*Symphony No. 4 in A major
*Suite for Orchestra in F major
*SinfoniettaConcertante
*Piano Concerto in G major
*Cello ConcertinoVocal/Choral
*"Psalm 80", for tenor, choir, and orchestra
Chamber/Instrumental
*String Trio
*Piano Trio
*Trio for Flute, Viola, and Cello
*Joueurs de Flute, flute and piano
*Violin Sonata No. 1 in D minor
*Violin Sonata No. 2 in A major
*Suite for Piano in F-sharp minor
*Piano Sonatina
*String Quartet
*"Serenade", for flute, string trio, and harp
*"Andante and Scherzo", for flute and piano
*"Divertimento", for piano and wind quintet
*"Segovia", Op. 29 for solo guitarRecommended Recordings
*Symphony No. 3 and "Ariadne et Bacchus" -
Royal Scottish National Orchestra /Stephane Deneve (Naxos Records )
*Symphony No. 3 -New York Philharmonic /Leonard Bernstein (Sony Classical )
*Symphony No. 4 -Philharmonia Orchestra /Herbert von Karajan (EMI )
*Symphony No 2 /Aeneas/ Bacchus /Spider's Feast - ORTF/Jean Martinon (Erato);
*Padmavati (opera)/ London Symphony Orchestra/Jean Martinon (BBC)
*Padmavati/Marilyn Horne ,Nicolai Gedda /Michel Plasson conducting (EMI)References and further reading
* "The Concise Edition of Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians", 8th ed. Revised by Nicolas Slonimsky. New York, Schirmer Books, 1993. ISBN 0-02-872416-X
* "Albert Roussel, un marin musicien", 1st ed. by Damien Top. Séguier, 2000.External links
* [http://www.opus1.com/~ehoornaert/roussel/ a Roussel website at opus1.com] , in English, with lists and commentary on the composer's works
* [http://albertroussel.free.fr/ a Roussel website] , in French, brief
* [http://ciar.free.fr/ a Roussel website] , in French, under construction
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*IMSLP|id=Roussel, Albert|cname=Albert Roussel
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