- Marie Jaëll
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Marie Jaëll (17 August 1846, Steinseltz – 4 February 1925, Paris) was a French pianist, composer, and music teacher.
She was born Marie Trautmann in Steinseltz, Bas-Rhin, and studied under Camille Saint-Saëns and César Franck. In 1862 she won first prize at the Paris Conservatory, where she was a student. She married Alfred Jaëll in 1866, and she was then known variously as Marie Trautmann, Marie Jaëll, Marie Jaëll Trautmann or Marie Trautmann Jaëll. Together they gave concerts in Europe and Russia. As a pianist, she specialized in the music of Schumann, Liszt, and Beethoven. She met Liszt in 1868, had lessons with him, was mentored by him, and helped him as a secretary for several weeks a year at Weimar late in his life. Liszt introduced her to Johannes Brahms and Anton Rubinstein. He wrote a set of variations on her Waltz for Piano, Four Hands, Op. 8. She also had composition lessons with César Franck and Camille Saint-Saëns, who dedicated his Piano Concerto No. 1 and the "Étude en forme de valse" to her.[1][2]
She was the first pianist to perform all the piano sonatas of Beethoven in Paris.[1]
She did scientific studies of hand techniques in piano playing and attempted to replace traditional drilling with systematic piano methods.[3] [4]
Marie Jaëll composed pieces for piano, concertos, quartets, and others.[5] She dedicated her cello concerto to Jules Delsart.[1]
Her students included Albert Schweitzer, who studied with her while also studying organ with Charles-Marie Widor in 1898-99.[6]
References
- ^ a b c "Jaëll Marie / née Trautmann (1846 - 1925)" (in French). musicologie.org. http://www.musicologie.org/Biographies/jaell_marie.html. Retrieved 25 February 2011.
- ^ Marie Trautmann Jaëll
- ^ Leuchtmann/Timbrel, "Marie Jaell". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. London, Macmillan, 2001.
- ^ Marie Jaëll: The Magic Touch, Piano Music by Mind Training, by C. Guichard (Algora, New-York, 2004, 216 p.)
- ^ Marie Jaëll Exhibit - Strasbourg
- ^ George N. Marshall, David Poling: Schweitzer
External links
- (French) www.marie-jaell.info A website about Marie Jaëll, partly in English
- Marie Jaëll - Deux Valses op. 8 for piano 4 hands (1874) on YouTube
- Free scores by Marie Jaëll at the International Music Score Library Project
Categories:- 1846 births
- 1925 deaths
- People from Bas-Rhin
- French classical pianists
- Romantic composers
- Women composers
- French composer stubs
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