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Auguste Franchomme – Works For Cello & String Quintet / Music For Two Cellos


Auguste Franchomme – Works For Cello & String Quintet / Music For Two Cellos

Recorded in May 1996

About the author:
Auguste-Joseph Franchomme (April 10, 1808 – January 21, 1884) was a French cellist and composer. Born in Lille Franchomme studied at the local conservatoire with M. Mas and Pierre Baumann, before continuing his education with Jean-Henri Levasseur and Louis-Pierre Norblin at the Conservatoire de Paris, where he won his first prize only after one year. He began his career playing with various orchestras and was appointed solo cello at the Sainte-Chapelle in 1828. Along with the violinist Jean-Delphin Alard, teacher of Pablo de Sarasate, and the pianist Charles Hallé, creator of the The Hallé, he was a founder and member of the Alard Quartet. The Quartet was rare for a chamber ensemble of its time because it consisted of professional musicians. Franchomme also belonged to the founding ranks of the Société des Concerts du Conservatoire. Franchomme forged close friendships with Felix Mendelssohn, when the latter visited Paris in 1831, and with Frédéric Chopin. In 1833, Chopin and Franchomme collaborated to write a Grand Duo Concertant for piano and cello, based on themes from Giacomo Meyerbeer’s opera Robert the Devil. Franchomme also rewrote the cello parts for Chopin’s Polonaise Brillante, op. 3, and was the dedicatee of Chopin’s Cello Sonata, op. 65. With the exception of a trip to England in 1856, Franchomme hardly left Paris, where he became a central figure of the city’s musical life. In 1843, he acquired the Duport Stradivarius from the son of Jean-Louis Duport for the then-record sum of FRF22,000. He also owned the De Munck Stradivarius of 1730. Franchomme succeeded Norblin as the head professor of cello at the Paris Conservatory in 1846, and his class included Jules Delsart, Louis Hegyesi, and Ernest Gillet. Franchomme was the most celebrated cellist of his time and contributed to the refinement of the bowing technique—elegant, sweet, and light—which distinguished the French school developed by Jean-Pierre, and Jean-Louis Duport. His left hand was renowned for its deft, precise, and expressive powers of execution. As a composer, Franchomme published some 55 works for cello, including the 12 caprices, op. 7, and the 12 Études, with optional second cello, op. 35; a cello concerto, op. 33; as well as numerous other pieces with piano, orchestral, or chamber accompaniment. For his contributions to music, he was decorated with the Légion d’honneur in 1884.

Players:
Ensemble Explorations
Roel Dieltiens: conductor
Christine Busch & Peter Despiegelaere: violons
Marten Boeken: alto
Roel Dieltiens & Lidewij Scheifes: violoncelles
Cléna Stein: contrebasse

Track List:

1. Variations sur des thèmes russes et écossais op. 6 (10:13)
2. Caprice op. 7 No.6 pour deux violoncelles en Ré majeur / D major (2:41)
3. Etude op. 35 No.11 pour deux violoncelles en ut dièse mineur / C sharp minor (5:28)
4. Etude op. 35 No.5 pour deux violoncelles en ut mineur / C minor (2:03)
5. Fantaisie sur une mélodie de Schubert op. 39 (6:33)
6. Nocturne op. 15 No.3 pour deux violoncelles en La bémol majeur / A flat major (5:12)
7. Nocturne op. 15 No.1 pour deux violoncelles en Ut mineur / C minor (5:18)
8. Deuxième Air russe varié op. 32 (11:10)
9. Caprice op. 7 No.9 pour deux violoncelles en Ré majeur / D major (4:04)
10. Caprice op. 7 No.7 pour deux violoncelles en Ut majeur / C major (5:42)
11. Caprice op. 7 No.11 pour deux violoncelles en sol mineur / G minor (2:01)
12. Fantaisie sur “Le Chant d’adieux” op. 9 (8:06)

Stereo, DDD, FLAC, 68:31 minutes. Covers & info included.

Part1 —–   Part2 —–   Part3