John Vallier

John Vallier (1920 1991) was an English classical pianist and composer.[1] He was the son of the famous French bass Jean Vallier and the English pianist Adela Verne (his aunt was Mathilde Verne).

Vallier toured extensively in the 1940s and 1950s for the WEA, playing recitals at schools and church halls throughout the UK, and doing valuable work in bringing classical music to parts of the country where live performances were rare. His amiable personality helped immeasurably in this task. As a serious artist, he was one of the last of the generation who, as an encore, would request the name of a composer and a popular tune from audience members, and improvise works in the style of the composer suggested.

'Toccatina'

His best known work is a toccatina for piano, written in 1950.[2] It was recorded by Benno Moiseiwitsch[3] and later by Marc-André Hamelin (2001).[4]

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