Paul Paray

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Paul Paray (born Le Tréport, May 24, 1886 - died Monte Carlo, October 10, 1979) was a French conductor, organist and composer. He is best remembered in the United States for being the resident conductor of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra for more than a decade.

His father, Auguste, was a sculptor and organist at St. Jacques church, and leader of an amateur musical society. He put young Paul in the society's orchestra as a drummer. Later, Paul Paray went to Rouen to study music with the abbots Bourgeois and Bourdon, and organ with Haelling. This prepared him to enter the Paris Conservatoire. In 1911, Paul Paray won the Premier Grand Prix de Rome for his cantata Yanitza.

As World War I started, Paul Paray heeded the call to arms and joined the French Army. In 1914 he was a prisoner of war at the Darmstadt camp, where he composed a string quartet.

After the war, Paray was music director of the orchestra of the Casino de Cauterets, which included players from the Lamoureux Orchestra. This was a springboard for him to conduct the Lamoureux Orchestra. Later he was music director of the Concerts Colonne and the Monte Carlo Orchestra.

In 1922 Paray composed the ballet Adonis troublé. In 1931 he wrote the Mass for the 500th Anniversary of the Death of Joan of Arc, which was premiered at the cathedral in Rouen to commemorate the quincentennary of Joan of Arc's martyr death. In 1935 he wrote his Symphony No. 1 in C major, which was premiered at the Concerts Colonne in 1931, and in 1940 his Symphony No. 2 in A major.

Paray made his American debut with the New York Philharmonic-Symphony Orchestra in 1939. In 1952 he was appointed music director of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, which he conducted until 1963, as well as made many recordings with them on the Mercury label.

Well known recordings include his performance of Saint-Saëns' Symphony No. 3 in C minor. The circumstances surrounding that October, 1957 recording were most fortuitous. Paray had built the Detroit Symphony into one of the finest French orchestras in the world, and understood the particular requirements of the work in a unique way. Marcel Dupré, his friend and fellow student from childhood, was organist for the session. Dupré had, himself, pulled stops for the composer Camille Saint-Saëns in a performance when Dupré was a young man, and the organ of Ford Auditorium in Detroit was well suited to the work. Though sonically dated by today's standards, it is still considered one of the finest recordings extant of the symphony.

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Preceded by:
Camille Chevillard
Principal Conductors, Lamoureux Orchestra
1923–1928
Succeeded by:
Albert Wolff
Preceded by:
unknown
Music Directors, Monte-Carlo Philharmonic Orchestra
1928–1933
Succeeded by:
Henri Tomasi
Preceded by:
none
Music Directors, Israel Philharmonic Orchestra
1949–1950
Succeeded by:
Jean Martinon
Preceded by:
Karl Krueger
Music Directors, Detroit Symphony Orchestra
1951–1962
Succeeded by:
Sixten Ehrling
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