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Marcel Samuel Rousseau

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Name
  
Marcel Samuel-Rousseau

Parents
  
Samuel Rousseau

Role
  
Composer

Died
  
June 11, 1955, Paris, France

Romance


Marcel Samuel-Rousseau (18 August 1882 Paris – 11 June 1955 Paris) was a French composer, organist, and opera director. He studied composition at the Paris Conservatoire and was awarded the Prix de Rome in 1905. He was the organist at Saint-Severin from 1919–1922 and president of the Societe des auteurs, compositeurs et editeurs de musique from 1935-1953. For many years he was a professor of harmony at the Paris Conservatoire and artistic director of the Pathe opera company. From 1941-1944 he was director of the Opera National de Paris.

As a composer Samuel-Rousseau was highly influenced by the works of Franck and Faure. He tended to be more conservative in style than many of contemporaries but he was a master at chromatic harmony and had a strong sense for the dramatic. His compositions include operas, ballets, orchestral and piano music and songs. His best works are his operas, which tend towards the exotic and are ambitious in scale. Two of his operas, Le Hulla (1920) and Kerkeb (1931), are based in the Orient; with the latter's title role a Barber dancer in a harem. His opera Tarass Boulba (1919), is based on the legend of a Cossack warrior. He also wrote one opera based on the Arthurian legend Le roi Arthur (1903).

References

Marcel Samuel-Rousseau Wikipedia