Joseph Boulnois

Joseph Boulnois
Born 28 January 1884
Verneuil-en-Halatte, France
Died 20 October 1918 (1918-10-21) (aged 34)
Military hospital of Chalaines
Education Conservatoire de Paris
Occupation Composer, organist
Awards Mort pour la France

Joseph Boulnois (28 January 1884 – 20 October 1918) was a French organist and composer.

Biography

Boulnois studied music at the Conservatoire de Paris, where he studied counterpoint with Georges Caussade and the organ with Louis Vierne. In 1906, he married pianist Jane Chevalier, and they had a son the following year, Michel Boulnois, who was also a composer and organist.

In 1908, he was appointed to the organ of the Église Sainte-Élisabeth-de-Hongrie, in the 3rd arrondissement of Paris. He stayed there a short time and was appointed to the organ of the Église Saint-Louis-d'Antin in the 9th arrondissement. In 1909, he was singing conductor at the Opéra-Comique. He remains very active in the field of concerts, notably as co-founder with Marc de Ranse, of the Concerts spirituels de Saint-Louis d'Antin; he also played in the Opéra-Comique. He also performed in the Église Saint-Dominique de Paris church in the 14th arrondissement.

After the beginning of the First World War, Boulnois was mobilized at the février hospital of Châlons-sur-Marne, where he was a nurse[1] from 1 January 1915.[2] Appointed a Ccrporal on 26 March 1915, he became a sergeant on 19 October 1916.[1]

During this period, Boulnois produced his most important works: the Sonate pour piano, the Suite en 5 parties for piano and cello, the Trio pour piano, violon et violoncelle).

Having contracted the 1918 flu pandemic, Boulnois was hospitalized on 15 October 1918.[1] He died five days later, three weeks before the Armistice of 11 November 1918.

Prizes

Principal works

Orchestra

  • Sonate pour piano et petit orchestre
  • Rhapsodie
  • Marine
  • Symphonie funèbre (unfinished)
  • La Toussaint (1903), orchestration by Édouard Mignan (1919)

Piano

  • Menuet pastoral
  • Choral en fa dièse mineur
  • La Toussaint (1903)
  • Madrigal
  • Pavane
  • Scherzino
  • Gigue
  • Toccata, dedicated to his wife Jane Chevalier
  • La Basilique (1918)
  • Sonate (1918)
  • Sainte Cécile au milieu d'un grand concert des anges (1918)

Organ

  • Quatre pièces brèves en ré (1912)

Chamber music

  • Quatuor à cordes (1916)
  • Sonate pour violon et piano
  • Sonate pour violoncelle piano, dedicated to Gérard Hekking (1917)
  • Suite en cinq parties for piano and cello (1918)
  • Trio pour piano, violon et violoncelle (1918)
  • Noël, pour violon et piano
  • Hiver, Neige, Noël, suite for cello and piano
  • Hymne à Bacchus, for cello
  • Jeux, for cello and piano
  • Musette et Bidon, suite for cello
  • Perdus dans un rêve, for cello and piano

Mélodies

  • Pastorale, on a poem by Maurice Rollinat (1908)
  • Accompagnement, poem by A. Samoin (1912)
  • Les roses de Saâdi, poem by Marceline Desbordes-Valmore (1915)
  • Nous n’irons plus au bois, poem by Théodore de Banville (1915)
  • Souvenir, poem by André Chénier (1916)
  • La Flûte, poem by André Chénier (1916)
  • Recueillement, poem by Charles Baudelaire (1916)
  • Trois Sonnets, poem by Charles-Augustin Sainte-Beuve (1917)
  • L’Ascension, poem by Sainte-Beuve (1917)
  • La Mort des Amants, poem by Maurice Rollinat
  • La Biche, poem by Maurice Rollinat, (Senart, 1923)
  • L’Angelus, poem by P. Courrière, 1912 (Senart, 1923)
  • La Cornemuse, poem by Maurice Rollinat, (1910), (Senart, 1923)

Stage music

  • L'anneau d'Isis, lyrical drama in 5 acts (1912)

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Archinoë – Archives départementales de l'Oise". ressources.archives.oise.fr. Retrieved 2015-12-19.
  2. Joseph Boulnois (December 1915). "Lettre à la Gazette des classes de composition du Conservatoire". Gazette des classes de composition du Conservatoire (in French) (1). p. 8. Retrieved 19 October 2017.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Anne Bongrain (2012). Le Conservatoire national de musique et de déclamation 1900–1930. Documents historiques et administratifs (in French). Paris: Vrin. p. 482. ISBN 978-2-7116-2398-3.
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