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Napoléon Henri Reber

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Name
  
Napoleon Reber

Role
  
Composer

Education
  
Conservatoire de Paris


Napoleon Henri Reber httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Died
  
November 24, 1880, Paris, France

Similar People
  
Francois Benoist, Jeremie Rhorer, Bertrand Chamayou, Anton Reicha, Louis Theodore Gouvy

Napoléon Henri Reber (21 October 1807, Mulhouse, Alsace – 24 November 1880, Paris) was a French composer.

Contents

Life and career

Reber studied with Anton Reicha and Jean François Lesueur, wrote chamber music, and set to music the new poems of the best French poets. He became professor of harmony at the Conservatoire de Paris in 1851 and succeeded Fromental Halévy as professor of composition in 1862, was inspector of the branch conservatories from 1871, and was elected to George Onslow's chairman in the Académie française in 1853.

His instrumental arrangement of Frédéric Chopin's Funeral March from the Funeral March Sonata was played at the graveside during Chopin's burial at Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris on 30 October 1849.

He was made a chevalier of the Legion of Honour in 1855, and an officer in 1870. On his death, he was succeeded as a member of the Institut by Camille Saint-Saëns. Notable students include Adolphe Danhauser and Jules Massenet.

Works

Among his works are a ballet, Le Diable amoureux (written jointly with François Benoist, 1840); the comic operas, Le nuit de Noël (1848), Le père Gaillard (1852), Les papillotes de M. Benoist (1853), and Les dames capitaines (1857); four symphonies, and much chamber music. He wrote a Traité d'harmonie (1862), which went through many editions.

Reber's compositions include a string quintet (his opus 1; with extra cello), two string quartets, a piano quartet (1866) and seven piano trios, and the four symphonies mentioned above:

  • Symphony no. 1 in D minor
  • Symphony no. 2 in C major (published by Richault of Paris)
  • Symphony no. 3 in E major (apparently by 1850; published by Richault of Paris )
  • Symphony no. 4 in G major (apparently by 1850; published by Richault of Paris )
  • References

    Napoléon Henri Reber Wikipedia