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César Franck (~ 1872), Postcard (
1910)
César Franck (December 10, 1822 – November
8, 1890), a Belgian composer, organist and music teacher who lived in France, was one of the great
figures in Romantic music in the second half of the
19th century.[1]
Biography
House Grady in Liège, where César Franck was born
César Auguste Jean Guillaume Hubert Franck was born in Liège, Belgium, to a father from the German-Belgian
border and a German mother. His father had ambitions for him to
become a concert pianist,
and he studied at the conservatoire in Liège before going to the Paris
Conservatoire in 1838 after private studies with Anton Reicha for a
year. Upon leaving in 1842 he briefly returned to Belgium, but went
back to Paris in 1844 and remained there for the rest of his life.
His decision to give up a career as a virtuoso led to strained
relations with his father during this time.[2]
During his first years in Paris, Franck made his living by
teaching, both privately and institutionally. He also held various
posts as organist: from 1847 to 1851 he was organist at Notre Dame
de Lorette, and from 1851 to 1858 he was organist at Saint Jean and
St François. During this time he became familiar with the work of
the famous French organ builder Aristide Cavaillé-Coll, and he
also worked on developing his technique as an organist and
improviser.
In 1858, he became organist at the newly consecrated Saint Clotilde Basilica, where he remained
until his death. Here he began to attract attention for his skill
as an improviser. His first set of organ compositions, however, was
not published until 1868, when he was 46 years old, although it
contains one of his finest organ pieces, the Grande Pièce
Symphonique. From 1872 to his death he was professor of organ
at the Paris Conservatory. His pupils included Vincent d'Indy,
Ernest
Chausson, Louis
Vierne, and Henri Duparc. As an organist he
was particularly noted for his skill in improvisation, and on the basis
of merely twelve major organ works, Franck is considered by many
the greatest composer of organ music after J. S. Bach. His works
were some of the finest organ pieces to come from France in over a
century, and laid the groundwork for the French symphonic organ
style. In particular, his Grande Pièce Symphonique, a work
of 25 minutes' duration, paved the way for the organ symphonies of
Charles-Marie Widor, Louis Vierne, and Marcel
Dupré.[1]
In 1890, Franck was involved in a serious traffic accident. It
was after this accident that he wrote his Trois chorals
for organ. Franck died as a result of complications from the
accident very shortly after finishing the chorales. He was interred
in the Cimetière du
Montparnasse in Paris.
Style
Many of Franck's works employ "cyclic form", a method of achieving unity
among several movements in which all of the principal themes of the
work are generated from a germinal motif. The main melodic
subjects, thus interrelated, are then recapitulated in the final
movement. His music is often contrapuntally
complex, using a harmonic
language that is prototypically late Romantic, showing a great deal of
influence from Franz
Liszt and Richard Wagner. In his compositions,
Franck showed a talent and a penchant for frequent, graceful modulations of key. Often these
modulatory sequences, achieved through a pivot chord or through
inflection of a melodic phrase, arrive at harmonically remote keys.
Indeed, Franck's students report that his most frequent admonition
was to always "modulate, modulate." Franck's modulatory style and
his idiomatic method of inflecting melodic phrases are among his
most recognizable traits. The key to his music may be found in his
personality. His friends record that he was "a man of utmost
humility, simplicity, reverence and industry."[1]
Legacy
Unusual for a composer of such importance and reputation,
Franck's fame rests largely on a small number of compositions
written in his later years, particularly his Symphony in D minor
(1886-88), the Symphonic Variations
for piano and orchestra (1885), the Prelude, Chorale and
Fugue for piano solo (1884), the Sonata for Violin and
Piano in A major (1886), the Piano Quintet in F minor (1879), and
the symphonic poem Le Chasseur maudit
(1883). The Symphony was especially admired and influential among
the younger generation of French composers and was highly
responsible for reinvigorating the French symphonic tradition after
years of decline. One of his best known shorter works is the motet
setting Panis Angelicus, which was
originally written for tenor solo with organ and string
accompaniment, but is also arranged for other voices and
instrumental combinations.
César Franck exerted a significant influence on music. He helped
to renew and reinvigorate chamber music and developed the use of
cyclic form. Claude Debussy and Maurice Ravel
remembered and employed the cyclic form, although their concepts of
music were no longer the same as Franck's.
Work
Notable
recordings
Symphony in
D minor
- Riccardo
Chailly: Concertgebouw Orchestra (London 4174872)
- Charles
Dutoit: Montréal Symphony Orchestra (Decca 4302782)
- Pierre
Monteux: Chicago Symphony Orchestra (RCA 09026619672)
- Jesús López-Cobos: Cincinnati
Symphony Orchestra (Telarc CD80247)
- Charles Münch: Boston Symphony Orchestra
(RCA 82876658332)
- Guido
Cantelli: NBC Symphony Orchestra (RCA Victor LM-1852)
- Charles O'Connell: Victor Symphony Orchestra (RCA Victor
36331-B [2nd Movement, abridged Version]
- Jean
Martinon: Orchestre National L'ORTF (Teldec 4509-97393-2)
- Andrew
Litton: Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra (Virgin Classics
LC7873)
Le
Chasseur maudit
- Daniel Barenboim: Paris Orchestra (DG 4372442)
- Charles Münch: Boston Symphony Orchestra (RCA 82876658332)
Organ
works
- Michael
Murray: Franck: Complete Masterworks for Organ
(Telarc, ASIN: B000003CWK).
- André
Marchal: Franck: L'oeuvre intégral pour orgue
(Erato)
- Jean
Langlais: The Complete Organ Works of César
Franck
- Olivier
Latry: César Franck: In Spiritum (Deutsche Grammophon,
ASIN: B0009DBXKY).
- Marie-Claire Alain: César
Franck: Great Organ Works (Erato, ASIN: B000005E3X).
- Louis Robilliard: Integrale de l'oeuvre pour
orgue
- Jeanne
Demessieux: Integrale de l'oeuvre pour orgue
- Daniel Roth
- Catherine Crozier
- Susan Landale: 'L'Oeuvre d'orgue' (Caliope,CAL 3941.2)
- David Sanger: The complete organ music. (BIS LP-124,
LP-125)
Sonata for violin and
piano in A major
- Itzhak Perlman, Vladimir Ashkenazy. (London 4141282)
- David Oistrakh/Sviatoslav Richter, (Melodia 1000743)
- Jasha Heifetz/Artur Rubinstein
- Hidetaro Suzuki, Zeyda Ruga Suzuki. (Select Records,
Canada)
- Josef Suk, Jan Panenka (Supraphon)
Piano
Quintet in F minor
- Clifford Curzon: Vienna Philharmonic Quartet (Decca
4211532)
- Capuçon, Renaud/Capuçon, Gautler, Martha Argerich/Live From The
Lugano Festival 2003, EMI Europe, B00022UTPM
Ballet
- Otaka plays Psyche et Eros
Piano
- Murray Perahia plays Franck and Liszt: Prelude, Choral et
Fugue
- Sodi Braide plays Franck: Prelude, Choral et
Fugue; Prelude, Aria et Final; transcriptions of
organ works Prelude, Fugue et Variation and Organ
Chorals 2 and 3 (Lyrinx LYR 249)
- Sviatoslav Richter plays Franck: Prelude, Chorale and
Fugue (Monitor MC 2022)
- Stephen
Hough: Franck - Piano Music (Hyperion Records CDA66918)
Media
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References
- ^ a
b
c
The Grove Concise Dictionary of Music - by Stanley Sadie, Macmillan
Press Ltd., London
- ^
v
- The Grove Concise Dictionary of Music - by Stanley Sadie,
Macmillan Press Ltd., London.
- Boyden, Matthew; Buckley, Jonathan
(1994). Classical Music on CD-The Rough Guide. London:
Rough Guides. ISBN
185828113X.
- Davis, Elizabeth, (ed.) (1997).
A Basic Music Library- Essential Scores and Sound
Recordings. Chicago: American Library Association. ISBN
0838934617.
External
links
| Persondata |
| NAME |
Franck, César |
| ALTERNATIVE
NAMES |
|
| SHORT
DESCRIPTION |
Belgian composer, organist and music teacher |
| DATE OF BIRTH |
10 December 1822 |
| PLACE OF
BIRTH |
Liège, Belgium |
| DATE OF DEATH |
8 November 1890 |
| PLACE OF
DEATH |
Paris |