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Augustin Barie

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Name
  
Augustin Barie

Role
  
Composer

Died
  
August 22, 1915, Antony, France

Similar People
  
Sylvio Lazzari, Marie‑Bernadette Dufourcet, Joseph Bonnet, Andre Marchal, Henri Mulet

Augustin Barie - Elegie (Marie-Therese Jehan)


Augustin Barie (15 November 1883 – 22 August 1915), was a French composer and organist.

Contents

Barie was born in Paris, and was blind from birth; however, he had large hands which spanned an eleventh, allowing him to play the difficult organ works of composers such as Cesar Franck with relative ease. He studied at the Institut National des Jeunes Aveugles under Adolphe Marty and Louis Vierne, then went on to study with Alexandre Guilmant at the Paris Conservatory. In 1906, he was awarded the Conservatory's premier prix. He then became organist at St Germain-des-Pres in Paris, as well as professor of organ at the Institut National des Jeunes Aveugles. Barie was a celebrated improviser, one of a long line of French Romantic virtuoso organists, and he wrote mostly for organ, including a Symphony (Op. 5) and Trois Pieces (Op. 7). His career was cut short when he died of a brain hemorrhage in Antony, France at the age of 31, not long after getting married.

Recordings

  • Germaine Labole & Augustin Barie - Œuvres d'Orgue, Julian Bewig, organ (classicophon.com, 2008)
  • La Toccata, Andre Marchal - Institut des jeunes aveugles, 1975 FY P1
  • L'Œuvre pour orgue, Marie-Therese Jehan - Solstice SOCD-17
  • Integrale de l'œuvre pour orgue, Veronique Le Guen - B000GIWTPA
  • Songs

    Trois Pieces - op 7: Lamento
    Trois Pieces - op 7: Marche
    Trois Pieces - op 7: Toccata

    References

    Augustin Barie Wikipedia