SAINT-SANS, (CHARLES-) CAMILLE


Meaning of SAINT-SANS, (CHARLES-) CAMILLE in English

born Oct. 9, 1835, Paris, Fr. died Dec. 16, 1921, Algiers composer chiefly remembered for his symphonic poemsthe first of that genre to be written by a Frenchmanand for his opera Samson et Dalila. Saint-Sans was notable for his pioneering efforts on behalf of French music, and he was also a gifted pianist and organist, as well as a writer of criticism, poetry, essays, and plays. Of his concerti and symphonies, in which he adapted the virtuosity of Franz Liszt's style to French traditions of harmony and form, his Third Symphony is most often performed. A child prodigy on the piano, Saint-Sans gave his first recital in 1846. He studied organ and composition at the Paris Conservatory, and in 1855 his First Symphony was performed. He became organist at the famed Church of the Madeleine in Paris in 1857, an association that lasted for 20 years. Liszt, whom he met about this time and with whom he formed an enduring friendship, described him as the finest organist in the world. From 1861 to 1865 he was professor of piano at the Niedermeyer School, where his pupils included Gabriel Faur and Andr Messager. In 1871, after the Franco-Prussian War, he helped found the National Society of Music, which promoted performances of the most significant French orchestral works of the succeeding generation. In the same year, he produced his first symphonic poem, Le Rouet d'Omphale (Omphale's Spinning Wheel), which, with Danse Macabre, is the most frequently performed of his four such works. His opera Samson et Dalila, rejected in Paris because of the prejudice against portraying biblical characters on the stage, was given in German at Weimar in 1877, on the recommendation of Liszt. It was finally staged in Paris in 1890 at the Thtre Eden and later became his most popular opera. In 1878 Saint-Sans lost both of his sons, and three years later he separated from his wife. Over the following years, he undertook extensive tours throughout Europe, the United States, South America, the Middle East, and East Asia, performing his five piano concerti and other keyboard works and conducting his symphonic compositions. As a pianist he was admired by Richard Wagner for his brilliant technique and was the subject of a study by Marcel Proust. From about 1880 until the end of his life, his immense production covered all fields of dramatic and instrumental music. His Third Symphony (1886), dedicated to the memory of Liszt, made skilled use of the organ and two pianos. In the same year, he wrote Carnaval des Animaux (Carnival of Animals) for small orchestra, a humorous fantasy not performed during his lifetime that has since won considerable popularity as a work for young people's concerts. Among the best of his later works are the Fifth Piano Concerto (1895) and the Second Cello Concerto (1902). Though he lived through the period of Wagner's influence, Saint-Sans remained unaffected by it and adhered to the classical models, upholding a conservative ideal of French music that emphasized polished craftsmanship and a sense of form. In his essays and memoirs he described the contemporary musical scene in a shrewd and often ironic manner.

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