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Jean Françaix

Jean Françaix

Country of origin: France
Birthday: May 23, 1912
Date of death: September 25, 1997

About Jean Françaix

I wish to be honest: when I am composing, the finest theories are the last things that come to mind. My interest is not primarily attracted by the ‘motorways of thought’, but more the ‘paths through the woods’. (Jean Françaix)

Jean Françaix was born on 23.5.1912 in Le Mans in France. He received his first music lessons at home: his father was a composer and pianist and also director of the Conservatoire and his mother a singing teacher and the founder of a renowned choir. In 1922 at the age of only 10, Françaix received his first tuition in harmony and later also counterpoint from Nadia Boulanger. The young composer wrote his first composition the very same year: a piano piece entitled “Pour Jacqueline”, dedicated to a cousin, which was printed two years later. Encouraged by Maurice Ravel, he continued his studies at the Paris Conservatoire. Alongside his compositional training, Françaix embarked on a career as concert pianist. At the age of 18, he received the first prize in the piano class of Isidore Philipp. Two years later, he represented the young French school of composition together with Claude Delvincourt at the international music festival in Vienna where his Huit Bagatelles were performed.

Jean Françaix achieved international success in 1936 with the first performance of his Concertino for piano and orchestra at the chamber music festival in Baden-Baden. During the ensuing years, the composer extended his oeuvre with numerous works in a wide range of genres including operas, ballets, orchestral works and also solo concertos, film music and vocal works. The composer also focused intensively on chamber music. Françaix taught at the Ecole Normale de Musique in Paris from 1959 to 1962. He participated actively in concert life, frequently together with his daughter Claude as partner at the piano, right up to shortly before his death on 25.9.1997 in Paris.

Despite close contacts with Francis Poulenc and the “Groupe des Six” and a predilection for French Impressionism and the Neoclassicism of Stravinsky, Jean Françaix never felt committed to any particular musical ideology. The foundations of his tonal, melodically elegant and rhythmically incisive style were laid at an early stage. In contrast to the avant-gardists of his generation, Françaix did not question the traditional listening habits of his public as a matter of principle. In his instrumental music, he displayed a particular interest for wind instruments. Chamber works such as the Petit Quatuor pour saxophones (1935), Quintette à vents No. 1 (1948) and Tema con variazioni (1974) for clarinet and piano were adopted into the regular repertoire just as the solo concerto for oboe L’Horloge de Flore (1959) and the Concerto for clarinet and orchestra from 1967.

In addition to five operas and sixteen ballets – including A la Françaix which was premiered in 1950 by the New York City Ballet - the oratorio L’Apocalypse selon Saint Jean can be considered a major work from the composer’s extensive oeuvre. This composition, completed in 1939 and classified as an “oratorio fantastique”, demands four soloists, mixed choir and two orchestras. Despite the large-scale forces, Françaix avoids all forms of monumental pathos in his interpretation of the Apocalypse of St John in the New Testament – the music is characterised by deeply felt ardency and meditative strength.

Jean Françaix received numerous awards: the Prix du Portique in 1950, the Grand Prix du Disque within the area of chamber music in 1954, the Grand Prix du Disque as performer and composer in 1965, the Grand Prix de la Société des auteurs dramatiques in 1983, the Prix Arthur Honegger in 1992 and the Grand Prix SACEM de la musique symphonique in 1992. In addition, Françaix was awarded the title of Officier de la Légion d'Honneur (1991), Commandeur de l'Ordre du mérite culturel by the royal house of Monaco (1993) and the Commandeur dans l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres (1994).

Worklist

Chronology

1912
Geboren am 23. Mai in Le Mans (F)
1923
Privatunterricht bei Nadia Boulanger in Komposition und Analyse
1926
Wechsel vom Konservatorium in Le Mans an das Pariser Konservatorium, Studium bei Isidore Philipp
1930
Erster Preis für Klavier der Klavierklasse des Konservatoriums
1932
Vertritt Frankreich auf den internationalen Festspielen der IGNM in Wien
1933
Komposition des ersten Balletts "Scuola di ballo" für die Ballets Russes in Monte-Carlo
1936
Erster international beachteter Erfolg mit dem "Concertino" für Klavier und Orchester beim Kammermusikfest in Baden-Baden
1939
Entstehung des Oratorio fantastique "L’Apocalypse selon St. Jean"
1948
Uraufführung der "Symphonie d’archets" in London
1950
Prix du Portique
1954
„Grand Prix du Disque“ im Bereich Kammermusik
1958–61
Mitglied im Conseil Supérieur des „Conservatoire National de Musique“ in Paris
1959–62
Lehrer an der „École Normale de Musique“ in Paris
1965
„Grand Prix du Disque“ als Interpret und Komponist
1967
Uraufführung des "Concerto pour flûte et orchestre"
1979
„Ludwig-Spohr-Preis“ der Stadt Braunschweig
1980
Uraufführung des "Concerto pour basson et 11 instruments à cordes"
1982
„Gutenberg-Plakette“ der Stadt Mainz
1988
Uraufführung des Balletts "Pierrot ou les secrets de la nuit"
1990
„Officier de la Légion d’Honneur“
1992
„Grand Prix SACEM de la musique symphonique“
1993
„Commandeur dans l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres“
1993
„Prix International Arthur Honegger“
1997
Gestorben am 25. September in Paris

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