Name Francois Campenhout | Role Singer | |
Similar People Seiji Ozawa, New Japan Philharmonic, Hiromori Hayashi, John Joseph Woods, Peter Dodds McCormick |
Belgian National Anthem — The Royal Band of the Belgian Guides Regiment
François van Campenhout (5 February 1779 – 24 April 1848) was a Belgian opera singer, conductor and composer. He composed the music for the Belgian national anthem, the Brabançonne.
Contents
- Belgian National Anthem The Royal Band of the Belgian Guides Regiment
- Inno del belgio la braban onne charles rogier fran ois van campenhout
- References
Campenhout was born in Brussels, where he studied violin. He worked initially as an office clerk, but soon pursued a career as a musician. After he had been a violist at the Théâtre de la Monnaie (or Muntschouwburg) in Brussels for a while, he started a career as a tenor at the Opera in Ghent. This was the beginning of a successful opera career, which brought him to Brussels, Antwerp, Paris, Amsterdam, The Hague, Lyon and Bordeaux. In 1828, he ended his career as a singer and became conductor in Brussels, where he died in 1848. He is buried at Brussels Cemetery in Evere, Brussels.
Campenhout wrote a large number of works: operas such as Grotius ou le Château de Lovesteyn and Passe-Partout, which were successful, and he also composed ballet music, symphonies and choir music. He wrote the music of the Brabançonne in September 1830, to a text by Alexandre Dechet (Jenneval).
Van Campenhout was a freemason and a member of the Grand Orient of Belgium.