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Flor Peeters

 
Music Encyclopedia: Flor Peeters
 

(b Tielen, 4 July 1903; d Antwerp, 4 July 1986). Belgian composer. He studied at the Lemmens Institute, Mechelen, where he was appointed professor in 1923; later he taught at the conservatories of Ghent (1931-8), Tilburg (1935-48) and Antwerp (1948-68), while also pursuing an international career as an organist. His works, characterized by a preference for classical forms, consist mostly of sacred choral and organ music, in a style looking to Dupré and Tournemire; his fluent melodies are influenced by Gregorian chant, Flemish Renaissance polyphony and folk themes. He published many editions and teaching works.



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Wikipedia: Flor Peeters
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Flor Peeters (July 4, 1903July 4, 1986) was a Belgian composer, organist and teacher.

Born and raised in the village of Tielen (near the Belgian-Dutch border), he was the youngest child in a family of eleven. When sixteen years old, he began his studies at the Lemmens Institute in Mechelen, which was named after the nineteenth-century organist Jacques-Nicolas Lemmens. At this college, his teachers were Lodewijk Mortelmans, Jules van Nuffel and Oscar Depuydt. Depuydt was well known at the time for his collaboration with the Desmet brothers on the first set of Gregorian accompaniments produced by the Lemmens Institute.

Peeters would later collaborate with Jules van Nuffel and the Institute's other professors, to produce the Nova Organi Harmonia. In 1923 he became an organ teacher at the Institute; simultaneously he acquired the position of chief organist at the cathedral in Mechelen, which he held for most of the rest of his life.

As an organist and pedagogue, Peeters enjoyed great renown, giving concerts and liturgical masterclasses all over the world. He also made recordings of sixteenth-, seventeenth- and eighteenth-century organ music; some of these have been reissued in recent years on compact disc. Most of his own pieces (he wrote well over 100) were for his own instrument, for choir, or for both.

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Music Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Music. Copyright © 1994 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
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