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Jacques François Fromental Élie Halévy

 
Artist: Fromental Halévy
 
Fromental Halévy
  • Period: Romantic (1820-1869)
  • Country: France
  • Born: May 27, 1799 in Paris, France
  • Died: March 17, 1862 in Nice, France
  • Genres: Opera

Biography

Jacques Fromental Halévy was an accomplished composer, teacher and essayist on music. A pupil of Cherubini, Halévy also studied in Italy. His best known opera, La juive, is a primary example of French grand opera. He composed over 30 operas, as well as cantatas, ballets, and songs.

In 1807, Elias Levy and his wife, Julie Meyer, changed the family name from Levy to Halévy. The next year, their precocious son, Jacques-François-Fromental, entered the Paris Conservatoire. By 1811, the young Halévy had become a composition student of Luigi Cherubini (1760-1842), who would champion his young pupil's work. Halévy also studied with H.M. Berton (1767-1844) and Étienne Méhul (1763-1817), but it was his contact with Cherubini that would have the most profound affect on his life and music.

Halévy won the Prix de Rome in 1819, allowing him to study in Rome for a year. While in Italy, Halévy experimented with Italian genres, including opera; in 1822 he traveled to Vienna, where he conversed with Beethoven on a number of occasions. After his return to Paris, Halévy was primarily concerned with achieving success in the theater. He did, however, channel his energy into other activities, such as teaching: in 1827 he was appointed professor of harmony at the Conservatoire, and later of counterpoint and composition. Among his students were Gounod, Massé, Bizet, and Saint-Saëns. Halévy became chef du chant at the Théâtre-Italien in 1826 and held the same position at the Opéra in 1829-1845.

By 1825, Halévy had completed four operas, plus the finale of a fifth -- none of which would ever be performed. L'artisan was his first work to reach the stage, receiving its premiere on January 30, 1827, at the Opéra-Comique; reviews were mixed, but it was not a total failure. In 1829 Halévy achieved significant success at the Opéra-Comique with Le dilettante d'Avignon, which remained in the house's repertory for several years. After becoming chef du chant at the Opéra, Halévy composed two ballets for that venue; in the meantime, he continued writing comic operas and garnering moderate praise.

Halévy's first attempt at grand opera, the five-act La juive (The Jewish Woman) of 1835, was a huge popular success. Eugène Scribe (1791-1861), who -- along with Giacomo Meyerbeer (1791-1864) -- invented the spectacular genre, supplied the libretto. La juive provided exactly the kind of grandeur sought by Louis Véron, director of the Paris Opéra, and became as much a central part of the French opera repertory as the works of Meyerbeer. In the same year, Halévy achieved another success, this time at the Opéra-Comique with L'éclair. Throughout the rest of his career, Halévy alternated between comic and grand opera composition.

Although not as popular as La juive, Halévy's Le reine di Chypre (1841) and Charles VI (1843) are equally great musical achievements, if not greater. Halévy's versatility comes to the fore in Le reine di Chypre, for which Saint-Georges' libretto required music befitting numerous exotic locales and strange characters; Wagner praised the work, writing of Halévy's work in general, "I have never heard dramatic music that has transported me so completely to a particular historical epoch." ~ John Palmer, All Music Guide
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Music Encyclopedia: (Jacques-François-) Fromental (-Elie) Halévy
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(b Paris, 27 May 1799; d Nice, 17 March 1862). French composer, teacher and writer. He was a pupil of Cherubini, Berton and Méhul at the Paris Conservatoire, winning the Prix de Rome in 1819. Back in Paris he became an opera composer and a professor at the Conservatoire (where his pupils included Gounod, Bizet and Saint-Saëns), also acting as chef du chant at the Théâtre-Italien and later at the Opéra. His first true success was Le dilettante d′Avignon (1829). By 1835 he had composed his first serious grand opera, La juive (libretto by Scribe), which became his greatest and the work on which his fame chiefly rests. L′éclair (1835) consolidated his position, followed by the grand operas La reine de Chypre (1841) and Charles VI (1843), among other, less successful, works. Fluent and professional, though owing much to Italian music and to Boieldieu and Auber, his writing is particularly imaginative in its orchestration and its ability to evoke period and place. His literary output includes Souvenirs et portraits (1861) and the posthumous Derniers souvenirs et portraits (1863).



 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Jacques François Fromental Élie Halévy
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Halévy, Jacques François Fromental Élie (zhäk fräNswä' frômäNtäl' älāvē') , 1799–1862, French operatic composer. He studied with Cherubini at the Paris Conservatory, where he became a professor in 1827. Halévy's one big success was La Juive (1835), although others, such as L'Éclair (1836) and La Reine de Chypre (1841), enjoyed popularity in their time.
 
WordNet: Fromental Halevy
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Note: click on a word meaning below to see its connections and related words.

The noun has one meaning:

Meaning #1: French operatic composer (1799-1862)
  Synonyms: Halevy, Jacques Francois Fromental Elie Halevy


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ® , a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Music Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Music. Copyright © 1994 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
WordNet. WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.  Read more