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Nadia Boulanger

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Nadia Boulanger
Nadia Boulanger in 1925
BornSeptember 16, 1887
DiedOctober 22, 1979 (aged 92)
NationalityFrance French
OccupationComposer

Nadia Boulanger (September 16, 1887October 22, 1979) was an influential French composer, conductor, and music professor. An outstanding music educator at the highest level[citation needed], she taught many of the most important composers and conductors of the 20th century.

Ancestors

Nadia Boulanger was born to a highly musical family. Her grandmother was the singer Marie-Julie Boulanger. Her grandfather, Frédéric Boulanger won first prize in violoncello in his fifth year (1797) at the then recently founded Paris Conservatoire. Her father, Ernest Boulanger, later studied at the same conservatory (his teachers included Charles-Valentin Alkan), and won the Prix de Rome in 1835. He later taught there, where he met Nadia's mother, the Russian Princess, Raissa Myshetskaya, who was the first music teacher Nadia and her sister ever had.

Biography

Nadia Boulanger was born in Paris. Her emotional life was largely centered around her love for her sister[original research?], Lili Boulanger, who was six years younger, and whose care Nadia had been entrusted with by their father. Lili was one of Nadia's first composition students, and it was largely under her guidance that Lili became the first woman ever to win the Prix de Rome, in 1913.

Nadia Boulanger entered the Paris Conservatoire at the age of ten. It was here that she studied organ with Alexandre Guilmant and Louis Vierne. She also studied composition with Gabriel Fauré and Charles-Marie Widor and accompaniment with Paul Vidal. After winning almost every prize available at the conservatory[citation needed] (including organ, accompaniment, and fugue), she won the Deuxième Grand Prix de Rome in 1908, which was a long-term goal of hers[citation needed]. She had tried two times before, making it to the final round, but not placing[citation needed]. Her composition for the 1908 Grand Prix caused a scandal. Instead of the required vocal fugue asked for by the judges, Boulanger composed a string quartet.[citation needed] While some of the judges, including Camille Saint-Saëns, objected, Boulanger was awarded the second place prize. Generally, the runner-up would receive the grand prize the following year, but Boulanger received no such honor[citation needed]; she never competed in the Prix de Rome again.

Nadia and Lili Boulanger had an interesting relationship. While she loved her sister unconditionally, Nadia always felt overshadowed by her sister's compositional abilities.[original research?] She once said "If there is anything of which I am very sure, it is that my music is useless."[1] Ten years passed between when Nadia Boulanger entered the Paris Conservatoire and when she placed second in the Grand Prix. Lili only spent one year in the conservatory before winning the first place prize with an overwhelming landslide vote.[citation needed] The death of their father in 1900 had been an important factor in Lili’s turn towards composing[original research?], and yet, after she died in 1918, Nadia Boulanger never composed again. Lili had asked her to complete her unfinished works, but Nadia did not feel her composing abilities were on par with her sister’s, and she felt she could not do the compositions justice[original research?].

Boulanger's compositional output includes a large number of vocal compositions (including over 30 songs), a number of pieces of chamber music, and a rhapsody for piano and orchestra. The rhapsody, written for Raoul Pugno, with whom she worked for 10 years, underwent so many revisions by Boulanger herself, stemming from her lack of self-confidence and her extreme self-criticism[original research?], that it is virtually unplayable now[citation needed]. Together, Boulanger and Pugno completed a song cycle, Les heures claires, and an opera, La ville morte. The opera was scheduled to come to the stage in 1914; however, due to Pugno’s death that same year and the beginning of World War I, La ville morte was shelved and was never performed. The entire vocal score and the orchestration of Acts I and III still survive, though[citation needed]. Boulanger was heavily influenced by Claude Debussy, and her music was often very chromatic, although always based in tonality, as she was highly suspicious of atonal music[original research?]. She was, nevertheless, a huge fan of Stravinsky, and she conducted the premiere of his concerto Dumbarton Oaks in 1938 in Washington, D.C.

Boulanger, who liked to be known as 'Mademoiselle', made her conducting debut in 1912. She was the first woman to conduct several major symphony orchestras, including the New York Philharmonic, the Boston Symphony Orchestra, the Philadelphia Orchestra, and in England the Hallé Orchestra of Manchester and the BBC Symphony Orchestra. On her first American tour she gave the premiere of Aaron Copland's "Symphony for Organ and Orchestra."

Her first teaching position was at the Conservatoire Femina-Musica in Paris in 1907. Later, she was one of the first staff members at Alfred Cortot's École Normale de Musique de Paris, beginning in 1920, where she taught a large variety of subjects. After World War I (1921) she was appointed professor of Harmony at the American Conservatory in Fontainebleau, where she was discovered by a new generation of American composers [see below.] She eventually became its director in 1948. She also taught at the Longy School of Music and the Paris Conservatory. She lived in the United States during World War II and taught at Wellesley College, Radcliffe College, and Juilliard. Even though her eyesight and hearing began to fade towards the end of her life, she worked almost until her death in 1979.

Many of her students from the 1920s, including Aaron Copland, Denoe Leedy, Walter Piston, Roy Harris, and Virgil Thomson, established a new school of composition based on her teaching. Virgil Thompson once said that every town in the United States had a five-and-dime and a Boulanger pupil[citation needed]. It is probably because of her many American students and her constant promotion of American music, that she is more valued by composers from outside of France than by those from her native country[original research?]. Her musical influence was immense throughout most of the Western musical world{fact}}. She died in Paris, aged 92.

Boulanger's teaching methods included traditional harmony, score reading at the piano, species counterpoint, analysis, and sight singing (using fixed-Do solfège). Her students were also expected to memorize Bach's Well-Tempered Clavier Books 1 and 2, and to learn to improvise fugues (as Bach often did)[citation needed].

Students

Neither Boulanger nor Annette Dieudonné, her life-long friend and assistant, kept records of those students who studied with Boulanger. In addition, it is virtually impossible to determine the exact nature of an individual's private study with Boulanger. All in all, Boulanger is believed to have taught a very large number of students from Europe, Australia, and Canada, as well as over 600 American musicians.

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Discography (currently available)

  • Women of Note. Women’s Philharmonic, Gillian Benet; Women’s Philharmonic; Louisville Orchestra; English Chamber Orchestra, Nina Flyer; New Zealand Chamber Orchestra, Alexa Still, along with Sarah Ravitch. Koch International Classics B000001SKH, 1997.
  • Chamber Music by French Female Composers. Martin Ostertag, Dagmar Becker, Werner Genuit. Classic Talent B000002K49, 2000.

References

  1. ^ Pendle, Karen and Robert Zierolf, "Composers of Modern Europe, Israel, Australia, and New Zealand" in Women & Music: A History ed. Karin Pendle, p256
  2. ^ CD Liner Notes. The Sequoia String Quartet. John C. Crawford: String Quartet. Benjamin Britten: Quartet No. 2, CD-740, Music & Arts Program of America, Inc. Los Angeles, 28 January 1985

External links