March - 12
Félix-AlexandreGuilmant
(12 March 1837 – 29 March 1911) was a French organist and composer. Guilmant
was born in Boulogne-sur-Mer. A student of his father, then of the Belgian
master Jacques-Nicolas Lemmens, he became an organist and teacher in his place
of birth. In 1871 he was appointed to play the organ regularly at la Trinité
church in Paris, and this position he held for 30 years.[1] From then on
Guilmant followed a career as avirtuoso; he gave concerts in the United States
(the first major French organist to tour that country), and in Canada, as well
as in Europe, making especially frequent visits to England. His American
achievements included a 1904 series of no fewer than 40 recitals on the largest
organ in the world, the St. Louis Exposition Organ, now preserved as the
nucleus of Philadelphia's Wanamaker Organ. With his younger colleague André
Pirro, Guilmant published a collection of scores, Archives des Maîtres de
l'Orgue (archives of the masters of the organ), a compilation of the
compositions of numerous pre-1750 French composers. The collection was printed
in ten volumes, the first in 1898 and the last (which Guilmant did not live to
finalize) in 1914. Guilmant provided a rather similar survey of organ pieces by
foreign composers, publishing l'Écoleclassique de l'Orgue (classical school of
the organ). These anthologies, despite all the musicological developments which
have taken place since Guilmant's own time, remain very valuable sources of
early music that is often hard to track down elsewhere.
In
1894 Guilmant founded the Schola Cantorum with Charles Bordes and Vincent
d'Indy. He taught there up until his death at his home in Meudon, near Paris,
in 1911. In addition, he taught at the Conservatoire de Paris where he
succeeded Charles-Marie Widor as organ teacher in 1896. Marcel Dupré was the
most celebrated of his many students. Others included AugustinBarié,
Joseph-Arthur Bernier, Joseph Bonnet, AlexandreCellier, Abel Decaux, Gabriel
Dupont, Philip Hale, Edgar Henrichsen, and ÉdouardMignan.
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