- Yves Nat
Yves Nat (born
29 December 1890 inBéziers ; died31 August 1956 inParis ) was a Frenchpianist andcomposer .Yves Nat showed an early aptitude for both piano and composition. By the age of seven he was allowed to improvise each Sunday at the organ of Béziers' cathedral during mass. At the age of ten he conducted his own "Fantasie" for orchestra.
Both Fauré and
Saint-Saens encouraged him to pursue his studies at theParis Conservatoire in the master class of the pianistLouis Diémer , receiving the class first prize in 1907. He dedicated himself tochamber music , undertook concert tours with theViolinist Jacques Thibaud andGeorge Enescu and appeared frequently in a duo withEugène Ysaÿe . In 1911 he made the first of a number of tours of theUnited States . He was mobilised in the course of theFirst World War , around which time he produced the first of his published compositions, the "Six Préludes pour Piano" and the "Six chansons à Païney".In the years which followed, Nat toured and performed extensively. However, he retired from concert life in 1937 to devote himself to teaching in the Paris Conservatoire and composing. However, he emerged from this retirement in 1953 to play a small number of highly successful concerts. The last of these, on the
4 February 1954 was the première of his ownPiano Concerto , with theOrchestre National de la Radio-diffusion Française under the conductorship ofPierre Dervaux , at theThéâtre des Champs-Élysées in Paris.Repertoire and reputation
His repertoire particularly covered the works of
Schubert , Schumann andBrahms . Between 1951 and 1955, he recorded all 32 of theBeethoven Piano Sonatas. For a French pianist of his age, this recorded repertoire was unusual. Most French pianists who developed artistically in the years during and after the first world war tended to champion French composers and to avoid the staple German repertoire. No recordings survive, unfortunately, of Nat's extensive French repertoire.Nat's strong technique and rich sonority suited the larger-scale Beethoven sonatas admirably. However, he was far from a bravura pianist - indeed, although his concerto has some formidable technical difficulties, it avoids the classic virtuoso approach, and instead tries to be what Nat himself described in a radio interview as a concerto for "piano within the orchestra". He summed up his approach as "Tout pour la musique; rien pour le piano", which might be translated as "it's not about the piano, it's about the music' [Quoted by Charles Timbrell in his essay accompanying Nat's complete recordings, EMI Classics, 2006] .
His compositions reveal a composer who has a talent for framing simple melodic lines in imaginative harmonies, best illustrated by the slow movement of his piano concerto. His orchestral style is reminiscent of the style of
Ravel , with a notable fondness forpercussion instruments.Beside the concerto and solo piano works he composed chamber music and an
Oratorio .Bibliography
[http://www.editionsbdl.com/YVES%20NAT.html Yves Nat, un musicien de légende] , by Mona Reverchon (conversations with Chantal Auber) 2006,
éditions Le Bord de L'eau .For more information see [http://www.monareverchon.fr Mona Reverchon's site][http://maya.bysoft.fr/Livres-Essais/c305_327/p1573/NOTES_ET_CARNETS_(Yves_Nat)/product_info.html Yves Nat, Notes et Carnets] , by Yves Nat (notes by Nat on interprétation, thoughts and letters) new edition 2006, ALBAN éditions.
Footnotes
External links
*
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.