Alexis-Henri Fissot Video
organista, pianista, compositore
- organo
- Francia
Ultimo aggiornamento
2024-06-25
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Marguerite Long Chopin Henri Fissot Antoine François Marmontel Louis Diémer Jacques Février Samson François Jean Doyen Maurice Ravel Couperin Jacques Thibaud 1873 1874 1891 1906 1914 1919 1920 1932 1936 1940 1943 1966
rec. 1936/37 Marguerite Long (13 November 1874 / 13 February 1966) was a French pianist and teacher. Marguerite Marie-Charlotte Long was born in Nîmes. She studied with Henri Fissot at the Paris Conservatoire, taking a premier prix in 1891, and privately with Antoine François Marmontel. From 1906 to 1940 she taught at the Paris Conservatoire, and in 1920 she succeeded Louis Diémer as professor of piano. She also taught privately. Her students included Jacques Février, Samson François, Zvart Sarkissian, Georges Savaria, and Gabriel Tacchino, as well as Jean Doyen, Monique Duphil, Marie-Thérèse Fourneau, Waleed Hourani, Willem Ibes, and Micheline Laudun Denis. Long's husband, Joseph de Marliave +••.••(...)), was killed in August 1914 in action during World War I. Maurice Ravel dedicated the last section, the Toccata, of Le Tombeau de Couperin to him. Marguerite Long gave the first performances of this work in 1919, and in January 1932 the premiere of Ravel's Piano Concerto in G major, which was dedicated to her. In 1943 she and violinist Jacques Thibaud established the Marguerite Long-Jacques Thibaud International Competition for violinists and pianists, which takes place each year in Paris. She died in Paris in 1966, aged 91. (Wikipedia)
Mozart Jacques Thibaud Marguerite Long Henri Fissot Antoine François Marmontel Louis Diémer Jacques Février Samson François Jean Doyen Maurice Ravel Couperin Régine Crespin Martin Marsick Alfred Cortot Pablo Casals Beethoven 1873 1874 1880 1891 1896 1898 1903 1906 1914 1919 1920 1930 1932 1940 1943 1953 1966 2011
Rondo - Allegro Marguerite Long (13 November 1874 / 13 February 1966) was a French pianist and teacher. Marguerite Marie-Charlotte Long was born in Nîmes. She studied with Henri Fissot at the Paris Conservatoire, taking a premier prix in 1891, and privately with Antoine François Marmontel. From 1906 to 1940 she taught at the Paris Conservatoire, and in 1920 she succeeded Louis Diémer as professor of piano. She also taught privately. Her students included Jacques Février, Samson François, Zvart Sarkissian, Georges Savaria, and Gabriel Tacchino, as well as Jean Doyen, Monique Duphil, Marie-Thérèse Fourneau, Waleed Hourani, Willem Ibes, and Micheline Laudun Denis. Long's husband, Joseph de Marliave +••.••(...)), was killed in August 1914 in action during World War I. Maurice Ravel dedicated the last section, the Toccata, of Le Tombeau de Couperin to him. Marguerite Long gave the first performances of this work in 1919, and in January 1932 the premiere of Ravel's Piano Concerto in G major, which was dedicated to her. In 1943 she and violinist Jacques Thibaud established the Marguerite Long-Jacques Thibaud International Competition for violinists and pianists, which takes place each year in Paris. From 2011, it will include singers and be known as the Long-Thibaud-Crespin Competition, in honour of the soprano Régine Crespin.[1] She died in Paris[2] in 1966, aged 91. Jacques Thibaud, celebrated French violinist; b. Bordeaux, Sept. 27, 1880; d. in an airplane crash near Mt. Cemet, in the French Alps, en route to French Indochina, Sept. 1, 1953. He began his training with his father and made his debut at age 8 in Bordeaux; at 13, he entered the Paris Conservatory as a pupil of Martin Marsick, graduating with the premier prix in 1896. Obliged to earn his living, he played the violin at the Café Rouge in Paris, where he was heard by the conductor Colonne, who offered him a position in his orchestra; in 1898 he made his debut as a soloist (with Colonne) with such success that he was engaged for 54 concerts in Paris in the same season. Subsequently, he appeared in all the musical centers of Europe, and from 1903 visited America numerous times. With his two brothers, a pianist and a cellist, he formed a trio, which had some success, but this was discontinued when he joined Alfred Cortot and Pablo Casals in a famous trio +••.••(...)). With Marguerite Long, he founded the renowned Long-Thibaud competition in 1943. His playing was notable for its warmth of expressive tone and fine dynamics; his interpretations of Beethoven ranked very high, but he was particularly authoritative in French music.
Alexis Henri Fissot Marmontel Marguerite Long Sieg
Phillip Sear plays the fifth piece (and second of two nocturnes) from '12 Morceaux de Genre' (late 1860s) by Henri Fissot +••.••(...)). / The French pianist and organist (Alexis-) Henri Fissot was a piano pupil of Marmontel at the Paris Conservatoire, apparently winning a Premier Prix at just 12 years old. He became a professor there in 1887, where he taught Marguerite Long. He was obviously a key player in the Paris piano world, and served on various competition juries. As an organist he held positions at St-Merry, and St-Vincent-de-Paul +••.••(...)). As seemed to be the tradition amongst his contemporaries, he published (in the late 1860s) a set of pieces (12 rather than the usual 20) each dedicated to a prominent musician of the day. This first piece in the set was dedicated to Saint-Saëns, and this one was dedicated to the French composer and organist Charles-Victor Sieg +••.••(...)). Thumbnail image by Bessi from Pixabay ( (http•••) ). / Played by Phillip Sear (http•••) (Email: •••@••• WhatsApp: (http•••) )
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