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Éveline Plicque-Andréani

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Éveline Plicque-Andréani, née Boudon (January 25, 1929, Paris 13me - October 16, 2018, Paris 17me),[1][2] was a French composer, musicologist and pedagogue, winner of the Prix de Rome for musical composition in 1950.

Biography

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Éveline Plicque-Andréani was the daughter of Irène Plicque, a singing teacher, born on May 9, 1901, who on August 18, 1922 married Guy Boudon, a schoolteacher, born on May 5, 1892. She was the natural daughter of Marcel Samuel-Rousseau.[3]

In December 1939, she was admitted to the Paris Conservatoire in music theory classes.[4] Still at the Conservatoire, she joined Marcel Samuel-Rouseau's harmony class from 1945 to 1950, then Noël Gallon's fugue class from 1946 to 1949.[4] Éveline Plicque-Andréani was also a student of Nadia Boulanger in the piano accompaniment class.[4] Her awards include: a first medal in solfège in 1942, a second prize in harmony in 1947 and a first prize in fugue in 1949.[4]

She won the Premier Grand Prix de Rome in 1950[5] with her cantata Bettina, a lyrical scene in one act on a text by Jacques Carol after Alfred de Musset.[6][7] This award caused a scandal, arising from the small number of composers on the jury,[8] and also because, according to one report, the winner's natural father was on the jury.[9] This is also a unique case in the history of the Prix de Rome where awards were distributed to three successive generations.[10]

Évelyne Plicque-Andréani's grandfather, Samuel Alexandre Rousseau (1853-1904), was indeed the winner of the second Premier Grand Prix de Rome for musical composition in 1878 and professor of harmony at the Paris Conservatoire from 1898 until his death in office in 1904.[11] Marcel Samuel-Rousseau (1882-1955), Samuel Rousseau's son, was also the winner of the second Premier Grand Prix de Rome in 1905 and professor of harmony at the Paris Conservatoire from 1919 until his retirement in 1952.[11]

From February 1951 to April 1954, Éveline Plicque-Andréani was a resident and some-time pensionnaire at the French Academy in Rome at the Villa Medici.[2] During her stay, she composed, among other things, melodies, symphonic suites and an oratorio.[12]

In 1969, Éveline Plicque-Andréani participated in the founding of the Music department of the Centre universitaire expérimentale de Vincennes [fr]. She subsequently became an assistant professor and then a professor at the same university, teaching harmony and composition and supervising numerous theses.[13] Unlike most of the winners of the Prix de Rome, she was never a professor at the Paris Conservatoire, but had a brilliant academic career.[13] She was successively director of the UFR Arts, Philosophie, Esthétique from 1986 to 1990, then vice-president of the Université Paris-VIII from 1993 to 1997.[13] She was named a knight in the order of the Légion d'honneur in 1997.[14][7] She retired in 1998.

Éveline Plicque-Andréani died on October 16, 2018 in Paris.[2] She is buried in the Villenoy cemetery (Seine-et-Marne).[7]

Musical works

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Her compositions include:[7][15]

  • Bettina, cantate du Prix de Rome (1950)
  • Six mélodies en quatre parties, envoi de Rome (1952)
  • Suite symphonique, en trois parties, envoi de Rome (1953)
  • Oratorio, envoi de Rome (1954)
  • Symphonie concertante, réduction pour piano (sd)
  • Pastelli Romani, suite pour orchestre, envoi de Rome (sd)
  • Symphonie concertante (1961) (Partition Choudens, Enregistrement INA et Radio France)
  • Le dormeur du Val, poème symphonique avec chœur
  • Leçons de ténèbres
  • Psaume LVI de David (chœur, solistes et orchestre)
  • Bunraku, pour clavecin (1989)
  • Nous étions tous des noms d’arbres, sur des textes d’Armand Gatti (1990)
  • Misa para el hombre nuevo, pour chœur, orchestre et percussions africaines (1990)
  • Missa defunctorum, Requiem inspiré des chants sacrés corses (1994)(Partition et CD Mandala MAN 4912 Harmonia Mundi)
  • Ukubekana, sur des poèmes zoulous, pour 12 voix (1995)
  • Brèves d’oiseaux, 7 pièces pour chœur d’enfants et 7 instruments à vent (1995)
  • Miroirs d’aube (quatuor pour clarinettes) (2001)
  • Le manège, opéra pour enfants (2001)
  • Chants de terre et de poudre Ces œuvres ont donné lieu à des représentations, selon le cas, à Paris et dans plusieurs villes de la couronne parisienne, en Corse (2 tournées), à Venise, au Brésil, au Japon.

Publications

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  • Éveline Andréani, Antitraité d'harmonie, Paris, Ed. Christian Bourgois, 1979 ISBN 9782264009418[16]
  • Éveline Andréani et Michel Borne, Le Don Juan ou la liaison dangereuse, Paris, l'Harmattan, 1996 ISBN 9782738443007
  • Éveline Andréani et Jean-Paul Olive, "La Tradition comme invention", Revue d'esthétique, no 4,‎ 1982
  • Eveline Andréani Antitraité d’harmonie, Paris, Ed. Christian Bourgeois, 1979, réédition L’Harmattan, 2020
  • Eveline Andréani Le Don Juan et les liaisons dangereuses, musique ou littérature, Paris, Montréal, Ed. L’Harmattan, 1985 ISBN 978-2-7384-4300-7
  • Eveline Andréani "Les rapports texte-musique ou les aventures du sens", in Analyse musicale, n° 9, Paris, October 1987.[15]

Bibliography

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Carole Bertho-Woolliams, Les femmes lauréates du Premier Prix de Rome de composition musicale : 1913-1966, Paris, L'Harmattan, coll. « Univers musical », 2019, 286 p. ISBN 978-2-343-15697-2, archive

Notes and references

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  1. ^ "matchID - Moteur de recherche des décès". deces.matchid.io. Retrieved 11 December 2024. archived
  2. ^ a b c "PLICQUE-ANDRÉANI, Évelyne". acad-artlas.huma-num.fr. Retrieved 11 December 2024. archive
  3. ^ "Prix de Rome 1950-1959". www.musimem.com. Retrieved 11 December 2024. (archive)
  4. ^ a b c d Bertho-Woolliams 2019, p. 37.
  5. ^ "Image of Eveline Plicque-Andreani, who has won the "Grand Prix de Rome". www.bridgemanimages.com. Retrieved 12 December 2024. at the castle of Fontainebleau, France, April 22, 1950
  6. ^ Bertho-Woolliams 2019, p. 77.
  7. ^ a b c d "Prix de Rome 1950-1959". www.musimem.com. Retrieved 11 December 2024. archive
  8. ^ "Le Figaro (Paris. 1854) - 99 Years available - Gallica". gallica.bnf.fr. Retrieved 11 December 2024.
  9. ^ "VIFS INCIDENTS AU CONCOURS DE ROME de composition musicale" [LIVELY INCIDENTS AT THE ROME COMPETITION FOR MUSIC COMPOSITION]. www.lemonde.fr (in French). 30 June 1950. Retrieved 11 December 2024. archive
  10. ^ "Prix de Rome 1870-1879". www.musimem.com. Retrieved 11 December 2024. archive
  11. ^ a b Bongrain, Anne (2012). "Le Conservatoire national de musique et de déclamation, 1900-1930 : documents historiques et administratifs" [The National Conservatory of Music and Declamation, 1900-1930: historical and administrative documents]. search.worldcat.org. Paris: Vrin. p. 750. ISBN 978-2-7116-2398-3. OCLC 773015941. archive
  12. ^ Bertho-Woolliams 2019, p. 103.
  13. ^ a b c Bertho-Woolliams 2019, p. 145
  14. ^ "Article - Décret du 31 décembre 1997 portant promotion et nomination" [Article - Decree of December 31, 1997 on promotion and appointment]. www.legifrance.gouv.fr. Retrieved 11 December 2024. archive
  15. ^ a b Bertho-Woolliams 2019, p. 202
  16. ^ Andréani, Eveline (1979). "Antitraité d'harmonie". Retrieved 11 December 2024. archive