Composer
Gabriel Fauré (1845-1924); FRA
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When Gabriel Fauré was a boy, Berlioz had just written La damnation de Faust and Henry David Thoreau was writing Walden. By the time of his death, Stravinsky had written The Rite of Spring and World War I had ended in the devastation of Europe. In this dramatic period in history, Fauré strove to bring together the best of traditional and progressive music and, in the process, created some of the most exquisite works in the French repertoire. He was one of the most advanced figures in French musical circles and influenced a generation of composers world-wide.Fauré was the youngest child of a school headmaster and spent many hours playing the harmonium in the chapel next to his father's school. Fauré's father enrolled the 9-year-old as a boarder at the École Niedermeyer in Paris, where he remained for 11 years, learning church music, organ, piano, harmony, counterpoint, and literature. In 1861, Saint-Saëns joined the school and introduced Fauré and other students to the works of more contemporary composers such as Schumann, Liszt, and Wagner. Fauré's earliest songs and piano pieces date from this period, just before his graduation in 1865, which he achieved with awards in almost every subject. For the next several years, he took on various organist positions, served for a time in the Imperial Guard, and taught. In 1871 he and his friends—d'Indy, Lalo, Duparc, and Chabrier—formed the Société Nationale de Musique, and soon after, Saint-Saëns introduced him to the salon of Pauline Viardot and Parisian musical high society. Fauré wrote his first important chamber works (the Violin Sonata No. 1 and Piano Quartet No. 1), then set out on a series of musical expeditions to meet Liszt and Wagner. Throughout the 1880s, he held various positions and continued to write songs and piano pieces, but felt unsure enough of his compositional talents to attempt anything much larger than incidental music. Fauré's pieces began to show a complexity of musical line and harmony which were to become the hallmarks of his music. He began to develop a highly original approach to tonality, in which modal harmony and altered scales figured largely. The next decade, however, is when Fauré came into his own. He was named composition professor at the Paris Conservatoire in 1896. His music, although considered too advanced by most, gained recognition amongst his musical friends. This was his first truly productive phase, seeing the completion of his Requiem, the Cinq Mélodies, and the Dolly Suite, among other works. Using an economy of expression and boldness of harmony, he built the musical bridge over which his students—such as Maurice Ravel and Nadia Boulanger—would cross on their journey into the twentieth century. In 1905, he was named director of the conservatory and made several significant reforms. Ironically, this position gave his works more exposure, but it reduced his time for composition and came when he was increasingly bothered by hearing problems. Fauré's works of this period show the last, most sophisticated stages of his writing, streamlined and elegant in form. During World War I, Fauré essentially remained in Paris and had another extremely productive phase, producing, among other things, Le Jardin clos and the Fantaisie for piano and orchestra, Op. 111, which show a force and violence that make them among the most powerful pieces in French music. In 1920 he retired from the school, and the following year gave up his music critic position with Le Figaro, which he had held since 1903. Between then and his death in 1924, he would produce his great, last works: several chamber works and the song cycle L'horizon chimérique.
© AMG, All Music Guide
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When Gabriel Fauré was a boy, Berlioz had just written La damnation de Faust and Henry David Thoreau was writing... More
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Piano Works
308 tracks
- Impromptus
18 tracks
- Impromptu No.1 in Eb, Op.25
2 tracks
- Impromptu No.2 in F-, Op.31
6 tracks
- Impromptu No.3 in Ab, Op.34
4 tracks
- Impromptu No.4 in Db, Op.91
2 tracks
- Impromptu No.5 in F#-, Op.102
3 tracks
- Impromptu No.6 in Db (transcribed from Impromptu for harp by Cortot), Op.86bis
1 track
- Impromptu No.1 in Eb, Op.25
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Nocturnes
87 tracks
- Nocturne No.1 in Eb-, Op.33
10 tracks
- 3 Nocturnes, Op.33
10 tracks
- Nocturne No.3 in Ab, Op.33
5 tracks
- Nocturne No.4 in Eb, Op.36
8 tracks
- Nocturne No.5 in Bb, Op.37
4 tracks
- Nocturne No.6 in Db, Op.63
10 tracks
- Nocturne No.7 in C#-, Op.74
6 tracks
- 8 Pieces breves, Op.84
11 tracks
- Nocturne No.9 in B-, Op.97
3 tracks
- Nocturne No.10 in B-, Op.99
3 tracks
- Nocturne No.11 in F#-, Op.104, No.1
4 tracks
- Nocturne No.12 in E-, Op.107
5 tracks
- Nocturne No.13 in B-, Op.119
8 tracks
- Nocturne No.1 in Eb-, Op.33
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Valse-Caprices
6 tracks
- Valse-Caprice No.1 in A, Op.30
3 tracks
- Valse-Caprice No.2 in Db, Op.38
1 track
- Valse-Caprice No.3 in Gb, Op.59
1 track
- Valse-caprice No.4 in Ab, Op.62
1 track
- Valse-Caprice No.1 in A, Op.30
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Barcarolles
40 tracks
- Barcarolle No.1 in A-, Op.26
4 tracks
- Barcarolle No.2 in G, Op.41
3 tracks
- Barcarolle No.3 in Gb, Op.42
4 tracks
- Barcarolle No.4 in Ab, Op.44
3 tracks
- Barcarolle No.5 in F#-, Op.66
5 tracks
- Barcarolle No.6 in Eb, Op.70
5 tracks
- Barcarolle No.7 in D-, Op.90
1 track
- Barcarolle No.8 in Db, Op.96
4 tracks
- Barcarolle No.9 in A-, Op.101
2 tracks
- Barcarolle No.10 in A-, Op.104, No.2
1 track
- Barcarolle No.11 in G-, Op.105
1 track
- Barcarolle No.12 in Eb, Op.106bis
2 tracks
- Barcarolle No.13 in C, Op.116
5 tracks
- Barcarolle No.1 in A-, Op.26
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Piano Works 4-Hands
82 tracks
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Other Solo Piano Works
75 tracks
- Mazurka in Bb, Op.32
2 tracks
- 8 Pièces brèves, Op.84
11 tracks
- 9 Preludes, Op.103
24 tracks
- 3 Romances sans paroles, Op.17
25 tracks
- Theme and Variations in C#-, Op.73
13 tracks
- Mazurka in Bb, Op.32
- Impromptus
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Orchestral Works
205 tracks
- Concertos
58 tracks
- Ballade for Piano and Orchestra, Op.19
14 tracks
- Berceuse for Violin and Orchestra, Op.16
16 tracks
- Elégie for Cello and Orchestra, Op.24
25 tracks
- Fantaisie for Piano and Orchestra in G, Op.111
2 tracks
- Violin Concerto, Op.14
1 track
- Ballade for Piano and Orchestra, Op.19
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Other Orchestral Works
147 tracks
- Masques et Bergamasques, Op.112
39 tracks
- Pelléas et Mélisande, Op.80 (suite)
91 tracks
- Shylock, Op.57
14 tracks
- Pelléas et Mélisande, Op.posth. (incidental music)
3 tracks
- Masques et Bergamasques, Op.112
- Concertos
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Chamber Works
409 tracks
- Allegretto Moderato, for cello and piano
1 track
- Andante for Violin and Piano in Bb, Op.75
2 tracks
- Berceuse, for violin and piano, Op.16
26 tracks
- Cello Sonata No.1 in D-, Op.109
15 tracks
- Cello Sonata No.2 in G-, Op.117
15 tracks
- Fantaisie for Flute and Piano or Orchestra in E-, Op.79
23 tracks
- Impromptu for Harp in Db, Op.86
6 tracks
- Morceau de Concours in F, for flute and piano
11 tracks
- Morceau de Lecture, for 2 cellos
2 tracks
- Morceau de Lecture, for flute and piano
2 tracks
- Morceau de Lecture, for violin and piano
1 track
- Papillon, for cello and piano, Op.77
10 tracks
- Piano Quartet No.1 in C-, Op.15
37 tracks
- Piano Quartet No.2 in G-, Op.45
41 tracks
- Piano Quintet No.1 in D-, Op.89
6 tracks
- Piano Quintet No.2 in C-, Op.115
12 tracks
- Piano Trio in D-, Op.120
35 tracks
- Piece for Oboe and Harp
1 track
- Romance in Bb, for violin and piano, Op.28
7 tracks
- Romance, for cello and piano, Op.69
10 tracks
- Sicilienne, for cello and piano, Op.78
39 tracks
- String Quartet in E-, Op.121
9 tracks
- Sérénade in B-, for cello and piano, Op.98
4 tracks
- Une Châteleine en sa tour, for harp, Op.110
5 tracks
- Violin Sonata No.1 in A, Op.13
77 tracks
- Violin Sonata No.2 in E-, Op.108
12 tracks
- Allegretto Moderato, for cello and piano
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Vocal Works
879 tracks
- Songs
422 tracks
- En prière (canticle)
8 tracks
- L'Horizon chimérique, Op.118
16 tracks
- La Bonne chanson, Op.61
57 tracks
- La chanson d'Eve, Op.95
20 tracks
- Le Jardin clos, Op.106
1 track
- 2 Madrigals, Op.87
2 tracks
- 5 Melodies 'De Venise', Op.58
40 tracks
- Mirages, Op.113
12 tracks
- O Salutaris, offertory for voice and organ or chamber orchestra in B, Op.47, No.1
1 track
- Poème d'un jour, Op.21
14 tracks
- 2 Songs, Op.1
8 tracks
- 2 Songs, Op.2
2 tracks
- 2 Songs, Op.3
3 tracks
- 2 Songs, Op.4
9 tracks
- 3 Songs, Op.5
6 tracks
- 3 Songs, Op.6
5 tracks
- 3 Songs, Op.7 (includes 'Après un rêve')
68 tracks
- 3 Songs, Op.8
15 tracks
- 3 Songs, Op.18
19 tracks
- 3 Songs, Op.23
34 tracks
- 2 Songs, Op.27
9 tracks
- 4 Songs, Op.39
17 tracks
- 2 Songs, Op.43
5 tracks
- 2 Songs, Op.46 (includes 'Clair de lune')
18 tracks
- 4 Songs, Op.51
11 tracks
- 2 Songs, Op.76
4 tracks
- 2 Songs, Op.83
8 tracks
- 3 Songs, Op.85
5 tracks
- Vocalise-étude
4 tracks
- Maria Mater gratiae, offertory for tenor, baritone, and organ, Op.47, No.2
1 track
- En prière (canticle)
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Choral Works
454 tracks
- Ave Maria, motet for 2 sopranos and organ
1 track
- Ave Maria, Op.67, No.2
2 tracks
- Ave verum corpus, motet for soprano, alto and organ, Op.65, No.1
3 tracks
- Cantique de Jean Racine, for chorus and organ, Op.11
26 tracks
- La naissance de Venus, for solo voices, chorus and orchestra, Op.29
1 track
- Les Djinns, for chorus and orchestra, Op.12
2 tracks
- Madrigal, for chorus and piano or orchestra, Op.35
3 tracks
- Messe basse, for solo voices, chorus and organ
22 tracks
- Noël d'enfants (Les anges dans nos campagnes), for children's chorus and organ
1 track
- Pavane, Op.50
86 tracks
- Requiem, Op.48
301 tracks
- Tantum ergo, for chorus, 3 children's voices and organ, Op.65, No.2
3 tracks
- Tantum ergo, for tenor, chorus, harp and organ in A, Op.55
2 tracks
- Tu es Petrus, for baritone, chorus and organ
1 track
- Ave Maria, motet for 2 sopranos and organ
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Stage Works
3 tracks
- Pénélope (opera)
3 tracks
- Pénélope (opera)
- Songs
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Miscellaneous
1 track
-
Piano Works
2 tracks
-
Nocturnes
2 tracks
- Nocturne No.3 in Ab, Op.33
1 track
- Nocturne No.4 in Eb, Op.36
1 track
- Nocturne No.3 in Ab, Op.33
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Nocturnes
-
Vocal Works
10 tracks
- Songs
2 tracks
- 2 Songs, Op.1
1 track
- 3 Songs, Op.7 (includes 'Après un rêve')
1 track
- 2 Songs, Op.1
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Choral Works
8 tracks
- Pavane, Op.50
1 track
- Requiem, Op.48
7 tracks
- Pavane, Op.50
- Songs
Below are works by G.Fauré that every music lover should explore:
- Piano Works
- Nocturne No.1 in Eb-, Op.33
10 tracks
- Nocturne No.3 in Ab, Op.33
5 tracks
- Dolly Suite, Op.56
76 tracks
- Nocturne No.1 in Eb-, Op.33
- Orchestral Works
- Berceuse for Violin and Orchestra, Op.16
16 tracks
- Elégie for Cello and Orchestra, Op.24
25 tracks
- Pelléas et Mélisande, Op.80 (suite)
91 tracks
- Notable Movement: 3.Sicilienne: Allegretto molto moderato
- Berceuse for Violin and Orchestra, Op.16
- Vocal Works
- 3 Songs, Op.7 (includes 'Après un rêve')
68 tracks
- Notable Movement: 1.Après un rêve
- 3 Songs, Op.23
34 tracks
- Notable Movement: 1.Les berceaux
- 2 Songs, Op.46 (includes 'Clair de lune')
18 tracks
- Notable Movement: 2.Clair de lune
- Cantique de Jean Racine, for chorus and organ, Op.11
26 tracks
- Pavane, Op.50
86 tracks
- Requiem, Op.48
301 tracks
- Notable Movement: 4.Pie Jesu
- 3 Songs, Op.7 (includes 'Après un rêve')



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