FRANCAIX, JEAN (1912 - 1997)
A composer of great facility and consistent wit, Jean Françaix,
a pupil of Nadia Boulanger, has written music of charm and elegance,
inventive and attractive in idiom, with instrumental works that
show the characteristic French handling of woodwind instruments.
Stage Works
The fifth of the operas of Jean Françaix, La Princesse de Clèves, exemplifies his qualities as a composer, heard also in his various ballet and film scores. Orchestral Music
Concerto
The Piano Concertino of 1932, written while Françaix was a student, won immediate popularity. Other concertos include a Piano Concerto and a Two Piano Concerto, a Violin Concertino and concertos for clarinet and for flute, as well as a number of other works making use of varied groups of solo instruments.
Chamber Music
There is particularly idiomatic handling of wind instruments in a number of works for instrumental ensemble, including a Saxophone Quartet. There is a Sonatine for violin and piano and another for trumpet and piano, while the Neuf pièces charactéristiques for ten wind instruments have a particular charm.
Keyboard Music
Keyboard music by Françaix includes L'insectarium for harpsichord, Huit danses exotiques for two pianos, a Marche solennelle for organ and a Piano Sonata.
Vocal and Choral Music
Solo vocal and choral settings by Françaix range from an oratorio, L'apocalypse de St Jean, to a cantata for mezzo-soprano and strings, Déploration de Tonton, chien fidèle (Lament for Tonton, faithful dog), with settings of La Fontaine and Rabelais.
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