Gustave Doret

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Gustave Doret (September 20, 1866 - April 19, 1943) was a Swiss composer and conductor.

Doret was born in 1866 in Aigle, Switzerland. He studied at the Berlin Academy of Music with Joseph Joachim, and then at the Paris Conservatory with Theodore Dubois and Jules Massenet. His career as a conductor began in 1894 in Paris, where he led the first performance of Claude Debussy's Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun. He was second conductor of the Concert d'Harcourt from 1893 to 1895 and director of the Opera-comique in the 1890s and 1900s. He was also the founder of the Théâtre du Jorat, in Mezières.

While his two serious operas, heavily indebted to Massenet, saw performances in Paris, his light opera and other stage works were far more popular across French-speaking Europe. In 1914, Doret returned to Switzerland and began studing local popular music and folk music traditions. He also wrote for Swiss newspapers and wrote a memoir, Temps et contretemps, published in 1942.

Most of his output was vocal, and included operas, music theater pieces, one oratorio, choral music, and more than 300 songs. His only instrumental works were two orchestral pieces, a string quartet, and a piano quintet.

Doret died 1943 in Lausanne.

[edit] Works

  • Les sept paroles du Christ (1895) Oratorio
  • Les Armaillis (1900) Opera
  • Fête des Vignerons (1905)
  • Aliénor (1910) Stage music
  • La Nuit des Quatre Temps (1910) Stage music
  • Tell (1914) Stage music
  • Fête des Vignerons (1927)
  • La Serv Ante d'Evolène (1937)

[edit] References

  • Don Randel, The Harvard Biographical Dictionary of Music. Harvard, 1996, p. 223.

[edit] External links

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