Ignace Leybach
Ignace Xavier Joseph Leybach (17 July 1817 – 23 May 1891) was a French pianist, organist, music educator and a composer of salon piano music.
Career
Born in Gambsheim, Alsace, Leybach had his early training as an organist with Joseph Wackenthaler (1795–1869), the organist and maître de chapelle of the Strasbourg Cathedral, and then was a pupil in Paris of Friedrich Kalkbrenner and of Chopin. He was a famous pianist in his time, but is largely remembered for a single piece, his Fifth Nocturne, Op. 52, for solo piano; it is still in print. His Fantaisie élégante uses familiar themes from Gounod's Faust.
From 1844 he was organist at the cathédrale Saint-Étienne, Toulouse, succeeding Justin Cadaux. He published a three-volume method for the organ for which he also wrote about 350 pieces. Leybach also wrote motets and liturgical music.
Leybach died in Toulouse.
References
- Oscar Thompson Cyclopedia of Music and Musicians, 1949: Ignace Leybach
- "Théophile Gautier, sa famille et la musique" note 18.
External links
- 1817 births
- 1891 deaths
- 19th-century classical composers
- 19th-century French male classical pianists
- 19th-century French composers
- Cathedral organists
- Classical composers of church music
- Composers for piano
- Composers for pipe organ
- French classical organists
- French male classical composers
- French music educators
- French Romantic composers
- French male organists
- Musicians from Bas-Rhin
- Piano pedagogues
- Male classical organists
- 19th-century organists