Tag: Cécile Chaminade

  • Cherchez les Femmes on “Sweetness and Light”

    Cherchez les Femmes on “Sweetness and Light”

    This week on “Sweetness and Light,” on the eve of International Women’s Day, we’ll have lighter works by six female composers: (pictured, clockwise from upper left) Peggy Stuart Coolidge, Elisabeth Lutyens, Teresa Carreño, Cécile Chaminade, Katherine Gladney Wells, and Doreen Carwithen – though not necessarily in that order. One was a crotchety avant-gardist who kept food on the table by writing music for sci-fi/horror films. One played for Abraham Lincoln at the White House. One was an heiress of the Seven-Up fortune.

    I’ll fill you in, as concisely as possible, on “Sweetness and Light.” Cherchez les femmes, this Saturday morning at 11:00 EST/8:00 PST, exclusively on KWAX Classical Oregon!

    Stream it, wherever you are, at the link:

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/

  • Cécile Chaminade Rediscovered

    Cécile Chaminade Rediscovered

    Cécile Chaminade, who shares her given name with the patron saint of music, was born on this date in 1857. Though assessed and recommended for study at the Paris Conservatory at the age of 10, her father forbade it, because he thought it beneath her class. He did, however, allow her to study privately. It was in this fashion that she continued with her piano lessons (her mother taught her when she was young), took up the violin, and studied composition with Benjamin Godard.

    Georges Bizet, who heard her perform some of her own works before she was teenager, was among those who were impressed by her talents. Later, her pieces were championed by Isidor Philipp, head of the piano department at the Paris Conservatory.

    In her early 20s, Chaminade began playing in a salon setting. This would be the prototype for her future appearances, at which she presented programs consisting solely of her own music.

    She married a much older man, a music publisher, on the condition that they maintain separate residences. Due to her husband’s advanced age, it was rumored to have been a “marriage of convenience.” After he died, only six years later, Chaminade never remarried.

    Her concerts in England were received with enthusiasm. If anything, she proved even more popular during a tour of the United States.

    In 1901, she made gramophone recordings of seven of her compositions. She also made some piano rolls before and after World War I. She died in Monte Carlo in 1944.

    For decades, then, she fell into obscurity, with the exceptions perhaps of her Concertino for Flute and Orchestra and whatever sheet music happened to turn up in Grandma’s piano bench.

    Her reputation was revived largely through recordings, a trickle at first, but now appearing with more frequency.

    Ambroise Thomas once commented, “This is not a composer who is a woman, but a woman who composes.” Chaminade said, “There is no sex in art. Genius is an independent quality. The woman of the future, with her broader outlook, her greater opportunities, will go far, I believe, in creative work of every description.”

    In 1913, Chaminade was elected a Chevalier of the Légion d’honneur, a first for a female composer. Here’s some rare footage from the ceremony.

    Happy birthday, Cécile Chaminade!


    Concertino for Flute and Orchestra

    Concertstück for Piano and Orchestra

    Chanson, “Te souviens-tu?” (text by Benjamin Godard)

    Piano works (linked individually in the information below the video)

    Chaminade plays Chaminade

  • Autumn Classical Music Women Composers

    Autumn Classical Music Women Composers

    La-dee-dah, dee-dah-dee-dum, ‘tis Autumn. Now somebody please tell the weather!

    Unfortunately, we all know the drill by now. 90 degrees at the equinox, things cool down somewhat, we put on a sweater, and then it’s back to 110 for Hallowe’en. It makes me long for the days when I would defy my mother so as not to have to wear a coat over my costume.

    I hope you’ll join me today on The Classical Network, as I continue to highlight music by women composers – in this month of the Clara Schumann bicentennial – even as I rail against nature with selections to mark the change of season by Cécile Chaminade, Fanny Mendelssohn, Imogen Holst, and Peggy Stuart Coolidge.

    I’ll also celebrate the birthday anniversaries of William Levi Dawson, Alexander Arutiunian, and Robert Helps, and offer a musical remembrance of Christopher Rouse, who died on Friday at the age of 70.

    The playlist will be as variegated as an enticing pile of leaves. I’ll be munching on Spiced Wafers and making like Nat King Cole, from 4 to 7 p.m. EDT, on WWFM 89.1 FM the Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Brazilian Music on WWFM This Afternoon

    Brazilian Music on WWFM This Afternoon

    For those of you under the spell of the Summer Olympics in Rio, you’ll have some more opportunities to enjoy some Brazilian music this afternoon, including works by Camargo Guarnieri and Heitor Villa-Lobos; also a piece inspired by Brazil by David Gunn.

    In addition, we’ll be celebrating the birthday anniversaries of French composers Cécile Chaminade and André Jolivet. I hope you’ll join me in some musical globetrotting this afternoon and early evening, from 4 to 7 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and at wwfm.org.

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