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Julien Koszul
Born 4 December 1844 Died 15 January 1927(1927-01-15) (aged 82) Occupation(s) Composer Organist
Julien Koszul (4 December 1844 – 15 January 1927) was a French composer and
pipe organist from
Alsace .
[1]
Born in
Morschwiller-le-Bas , Alsace, Koszul studied at the
École Niedermeyer de Paris with
Camille Saint-Saëns , together with
Gabriel Fauré and
Eugène Gigout as fellow students and friends.
He moved to
Roubaix , where he took the direction of the National Conservatory of Music. He encouraged
Albert Roussel to undertake an artistic career.
Composer
Henri Dutilleux and mathematician
Jean-Louis Koszul were his grandsons. Henri Dutilleux, who often recalled his memory, paid tribute to him in 2005 by being the originator of the publication of his correspondence.
[2]
Koszul died in
Douai .
1872: Deux Mélodies , poem by Charles Manso
1873: Romanzette pour piano . No 1, In E ♭, N ° 2, in C
1875: Puisque mai tout en fleurs ! Mélodie: No 1 contralto, baritone or mezzo-soprano
1877: Aubade! Mélody for tenor, lyric by Charles Manso
1879: S'il est un charmant Gazon ! ,
[3] poem by
Victor Hugo
1879: Bonsoir, Madeleine! lullaby for soprano or tenor, poem by Marc Mounier
1879: Sonnet! , poem by Marc Monnier
1893: Cantate Nadaud , for solis, choir and military and symphonic orchesters, poem by
Jules Rosoor ; score (piano and voice), Tourcoing :
Rosoor-Delattre , (
Bibliothèque nationale de France )
1902: Quo vadis! scène chorale, ..., poem by
Jules Rosoor (
Bibliothèque nationale de France )
1925: Yvonnette , little Walloon waltz, for piano
Première Valse (recording)
[4]
International National Artists