Role Composer | ||
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Name Pierre-Joseph-Guillaume Zimmermann Children Anna Zimmerman, Juliette Dubufe Grandchildren Guillaume Dubufe, Juliette-Hortense Dubufe Great grandchildren Vincent Dubufe, Marguerite Dubufe, Mireille Dubufe, Edouard Dubufe, Juliette Dubufe-Wehrle Similar People Antoine Francois Marmontel, Francois Benoist, Fromental Halevy, Jean‑Francois Le Sueur, Friedrich Kalkbrenner |
Pierre-Joseph-Guillaume Zimmerman, (17 March 1785 – 29 October 1853), known as Pierre Zimmermann and Joseph Zimmermann, was a French pianist, composer, and music teacher.
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Biography
Zimmerman was born in Paris, the son of a piano maker. He attended the Paris Conservatory in 1798, studying piano with François-Adrien Boieldieu; while a student there, he won first prizes for piano in 1800 (Friedrich Kalkbrenner came second) and harmony in 1802. He would later study under Luigi Cherubini. Zimmerman became a piano assistant at the Conservatory in 1811 and a full professor there in 1816, serving until 1848; he refused a position as a professor of counterpoint and fugue in 1821. Among his students were Charles Gounod (who married one of his daughters), Georges Bizet, César Franck, Charles-Valentin Alkan, Ambroise Thomas, Louis Lacombe, Alexandre Goria and Lefébure-Wély. In 1842 he denied Conservatory admission to 13-year old Louis Moreau Gottschalk without an audition on account of Gottschalk's American nationality, commenting that "America is a country of steam engines". Zimmerman was often assisted in his teaching by Gounod.
Zimmerman wrote two operas, L'enlèvement (Opéra-Comique, 1830) and Nausicaa (never staged). He also composed two piano concertos, one piano sonata, and numerous other works for piano. His most important legacy is considered his Encyclopédie du pianiste, a complete method of piano playing, including a treatise on harmony and counterpoint.
He died in Paris and is buried in the Auteuil Cemetery in the 16th arrondissement.