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Villanelle

About the Composer

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Paul Dukas

A French composer and music critic. His reflections on musical aesthetics constitute an important contemporary document for better understanding his era. Among his Impressionist compositions are to be found works for orchestra, piano and chamber pieces, and vocal music.

1865Born in Paris on October 1.
from1881Studies harmony with Théodore Dubois and piano with George-Amadée Mathias at the Paris Conservatoire.
from 1883He meets Claude Debussy in Ernest Guiraud’s composition class.
1884His overture “Goetz de Berlichingen” is premiered.
from1889Unsuccessful attempts at the Grand Prix de Rome prompt him to leave the Conservatoire.
1892His overture “Polyeucte” celebrates its Paris premiere. He emerges as a music critic for the Revue hebdomadaire.
1897On May 18, his best-known work, “L’Apprenti sorcier” (“The Sorceror’s Apprentice”) is premiered at the Société Nationale.
from 1900–07In his most creative phase of composition, works like the “Variations, interlude et finale sur un thème de Rameau” and opera “Ariane et Barbe-Bleue” (“Ariane and Bluebeard”) are written.
1910–13Professor of orchestration at the Paris Conservatoire.
1923–32Writes works on pedagogy and music history.
1928He teaches composition at the Paris Conservatoire and at the École Normale. Using the music of Johann Sebastian Bach, he communicates primarily historical styles. Olivier Messiaen and Maurice Duruflé are among his students.
1934He becomes a member of the Académie des Beaux-Arts.
1935Dies in Paris on May 17.

About the Authors

Dominik Rahmer (Editor)

Dr. Dominik Rahmer, born in 1971 in Mainz, studied musicology, philosophy and maths in Bonn. He did his Magister Artium in 1999 and his doctorate in 2006 with a thesis on the music criticism of Paul Dukas.

From 2001 to 2011 he was employed at Boosey & Hawkes/Bote & Bock in Berlin, where he also worked on the Critical Edition of the Works of Jacques Offenbach (OEK). Since 2011 he has been an editor at G. Henle Publishers in Munich, with a particular focus on French and Russian music and works for wind instruments.

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Klaus Schilde (Fingering)

Prof. Klaus Schilde, born in 1926, spent his childhood in Dresden. There he was greatly influenced by Walter Engel, who taught him the piano (Kodaly method), composition and violin. From 1946–1948 he studied at the music conservatory in Leipzig with Hugo Steurer. After moving to the west in 1952 he studied with Walter Gieseking and Edwin Fischer, as well as with Marguerite Long, Lucette Descaves and Nadia Boulanger in Paris.

Schilde won numerous prizes. From 1947 onwards he gave concerts as a soloist and chamber musician on almost every single continent with renowned orchestras. He taught at the music conservatories in East Berlin Detmold, West Berlin, Munich, Tokyo (Geidai) and Weimar. From 1988–1991 he was President of the Staatliche Hochschule für Musik und Theater in Munich, where he also taught for decades as a professor. There are numerous radio and television broadcasts with Klaus Schilde as well as CD recordings. Schilde has contributed fingerings to almost 100 Henle Urtext editions.

Prof. Klaus Schilde passed away on 10 December, 2020.

Diese Urtextausgabe sollte unbedingt benutzt werden, wenn man sich mit diesem Werk befasst – denn sie stützt sich auf Dukas Autograph sowie auf die Erstausgabe in der Originalbesetzung für Horn und Klavier.

Sonic, 2013

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