Henri Duparc (composer) facts for kids
Eugène Marie Henri Fouques Duparc (21 January 1848 – 12 February 1933) was a French composer of the late Romantic period.
Biography
Son of Charles Fouques-Duparc and Amélie de Guaita. Henri Fouques-Duparc was born in Paris. He studied piano with César Franck at the Jesuit College in the Vaugirard district and became one of his first composition pupils. Following military service in the Franco-Prussian War, he married Ellen MacSwiney, from Scotland, on 9 November 1871. In the same year, he joined Saint-Saëns and Romain Bussine to found the Société Nationale de Musique.
Duparc is best known for his 17 mélodies ("art songs"), with texts by poets such as Baudelaire, Gautier, Leconte de Lisle and Goethe.
A mental illness, diagnosed at the time as "neurasthenia", caused him abruptly to cease composing at age 37, in 1885. He devoted himself to his family and his other passions, drawing and painting. But increasing vision loss after the turn of the century eventually led to total blindness. He destroyed most of his music, leaving fewer than 40 works to posterity. In a poignant letter about the destruction of his incomplete opera, dated 19 January 1922, to the composer Jean Cras, his close friend, Duparc wrote:
Après avoir vécu 25 ans dans un splendide rêve, toute idée de représentation m'était – je vous le répète – devenue odieuse. L'autre motif de cette destruction, que je ne regrette pas, c'est la complète transformation morale que Dieu a opéré en moi il y a 20 ans et qui en une seule minute a abolie toute ma vie passée. Dès lors, la Roussalka n'ayant aucun rapport avec ma vie nouvelle ne devait plus exister.
(Having lived for 25 years in a splendid dream, the whole idea of [musical] representation has become – I repeat to you – repugnant. The other reason for this destruction, which I do not regret, was the complete moral transformation that God imposed on me 20 years ago and which, in a single minute, obliterated all of my past life. Since then, [my opera] Roussalka, not having any connection with my new life, should no longer exist.)
He spent most of the rest of his life in La Tour-de-Peilz, near Vevey, Switzerland, and died in Mont-de-Marsan, in southwestern France, at age 85.
Duparc is buried at Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris. A square in the 17th arrondissement of Paris, near the rue de Levis, is named in his honor.
Works
Year | Composition | Notes | Type of Work |
---|---|---|---|
1863-65 | Six rêveries, pour piano | Printed, but unpublished. Private collection of Mme. d'Armagnac, granddaughter of Duparc. | Piano solo |
1867 | Sonate pour violoncelle et piano | Premiered in 1948. Private collection of Mme. d'Armagnac, granddaughter of Duparc. | Cello & piano |
1867-69 | Feuilles volantes, pour piano | Piano solo | |
1868 | Chanson triste | Published as: Op. 2, no. 4. Text by Jean Lahor. | Voice & piano (orchestrated 1912) |
1869 | Le galop | Published as: Op. 2, no. 5. Text by Sully Prudhomme. Released in 1948. | Voice & piano |
1869 | Romance de Mignon | Published as: Op. 2, no. 3. Text by Victor Wilder, based on « Kennst du das Land » by Goethe). | Voice & piano |
1869 | Sérénade | Published as: Op. 2, no. 2. Text by Gabriel Marc. | Voice & piano |
1869 | Soupir | Published as: Op. 2, no. 1. Text by Sully Prudhomme. Revised 1902. | Voice & piano |
1869 | Cinq mélodies, op. 2 | Voice & piano | |
1869 | Beaulieu, pour piano | Private collection of Mme. d'Armagnac, granddaughter of Duparc. | Piano solo |
1869-70 | Au pays où se fait la guerre | Text by Théophile Gautier. Original title: Absence. Definitive version, 1911–13. | Voice & piano (orchestrated 1876) |
1870 | L'invitation au voyage | Text by Charles Baudelaire. Released in 1872. | Voice & piano (orchestrated 1892–95) |
1871 | La fuite, duo pour soprano et ténor avec piano | Published as: Op. 2, no. 6. | Duet for voice & piano |
1871 | La vague et la cloche | Text by François Coppée. Released in 1873. | Voice & piano (Orchestrated) |
1872 | Suite d'orchestre | (Lost). | Orchestral suite |
1872-82 | Phidylé | Text by Leconte de Lisle. Released in 1889 | Voice & piano (orchestrated, 1891–92) |
1873 | Laendler, suite de valses pour orchestre | (Destroyed). | Orchestral suite |
1873 | Laendler (version for two pianos) | Two pianos | |
1874 | Poème nocturne : I. Aux étoiles - II. Lutins et follets - III. Duo: L’aurore |
Part lost, only: I. Aux étoiles is extant. Premiered in Paris on 11 April 1874 at the Société Nationale de Musique Moderne. |
Orchestral work |
1874 | Elégie | Text by Ellen MacSwinny(?) (wife of Duparc) after Thomas Moore. | Voice & piano |
1874 | Extase | Text by Jean Lahor. Released 1882. Revised 1884. | Voice & piano |
1875 | Lénore | Based on the ballad of the same name by Gottfried August Bürger. | Symphonic poem |
1875 | Lénore (version for two pianos) | transcription for 2 pianos (1884) by Camille Saint-Saëns | Two pianos |
1877 | Suite pour le piano | (Lost). | Piano solo |
1879 | Le manoir de Rosemonde | Text by Robert de Bonnières | Voice & piano (orchestrated 1912) |
1879-95 | Roussalka, opéra en trois actes | Unfinished. Based on Русалки (Rusalka), a dramatic poem by Alexander Pushkin. Destroyed except for "Absence," republished as "Au pays où se fait la guerre". | Opera in 3 acts |
1880 | Sérénade florentine | Text by Jean Lahor. Released 1882. | Voice & piano |
1882 | Benedicat vobis Dominus | Motet for three mixed voices and organ (or piano). | Choral music |
1883 | Lamento | Text by Théophile Gautier. | Voice & piano |
1883 | Testament | Text by Paul Armand Silvestre. Released in 1898. | Voice & piano (orchestrated 1900–02) |
1884 | La vie antérieure | Text by Charles Baudelaire. | Voice & piano (orchestrated 1911–13) |
1886 | Recueillement | Unfinished. (Destroyed). | Voice & piano? |
1892 | Danse lente | Extract from Roussalka. Copied by Ernest Ansermet. Preserved by Éditions Salabert. | Orchestral work |
1903 | Transcription of two works for organ by J.S. Bach: Prélude and fugue in E minor ("Cathedral"), BWV 513 Prélude and fugue in A minor ("The Great"), BWV 543 |
Two pianos | |
1908 | Transcription of six organ works by César Franck | Two pianos | |
1910 | Aux étoiles, pour piano | Also: version for piano four hands, & version for organ. Revised 1911. | Piano solo |
1911 | Aux étoiles | Entr'acte for an unpublished drama. | Orchestral work |
(n.d.) | Transcription of a work for organ by J.S. Bach: Chorale Prélude and Fugue: In dir ist Freude, BWV 615 |
Private collection of Ernest Ansermet | Two pianos |
See also
In Spanish: Henri Duparc para niños