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Jules Demersseman

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Name
  
Jules Demersseman

Role
  
Composer


Jules Demersseman httpsiytimgcomi3UmxwBgr2YVlLeGqndHyOwmq1jpg

Died
  
December 1, 1866, Paris, France

Similar People
  
Jean‑Baptiste Singelee, Theobald Boehm, Franz Lachner, Frederick Hemke, Francois Devienne

Paul lacombe plays fantaisie sur un th me original by jules demersseman alto saxophone piano


Jules Auguste Demersseman (9 January 1833 – 1 December 1866) was a French flautist and composer.

Contents

Deuxieme solo de concert jules demersseman aaron rivkin


Biography

Demersseman was born in Hondschoote, Département Nord, France, near the Belgian border. At 11, he was a student of Jean-Louis Tulou at the Conservatoire de Paris. He won the first prize there at the age of twelve and quickly became famous as a virtuoso. However, he was not considered for a professorship, since he, influenced by his teacher, did not want to decide in favor of the modern type of transverse flute designed by Theobald Böhm which had been introduced into France in the meantime. Demersseman was only 33 when he died in Paris, presumably from tuberculosis.

Works

Demersseman wrote numerous works for his own instrument, the flute. Probably the best known of his works today is the Solo de Concert, Op. 82 No. 6. This piece, also known as the "Italian Concerto", uses a Neapolitan folk melody in the middle movement and closes with a saltarello. In addition to his works for flute, Demersseman was one of the first French composers to write music for the newly developed saxophone. He wrote a Fantasy for the saxophone and piano.

References

Jules Demersseman Wikipedia