Alice Sauvrezis Explained

Alice Marie Marguerite Sauvrezis (4 April 1866[1] – 12 April 1946) was a French composer, pianist, choral conductor and concert organiser. As an active member of a group of Breton composers in Paris and as president of the Société Artistique et Littéraire de l'Ouest she promoted Celticist music and culture in France.

Life and music

Little is known about Alice Sauvrezis’ life. She was born in the Breton city of Nantes where she worked as a piano teacher.[2] She studied first with César Franck and later with Ernest Guiraud and Paul Vidal.[3] She joined the Paris-based Société Artistique et Littéraire de l'Ouest in 1891[4] and became its president in 1920.[5] The society organised concerts of "Celtic" music (contemporary "classical" music in a Celticist style) and poetry readings in so-called "Soirées celtiques" at Sorbonne university that included the creative output of Breton, Norman, and Irish composers, writers and artists. During 1913–1914 she was also the only female member of the short-lived Association des Compositeurs Bretons.[6]

Her published music consists mainly of songs as well as piano and chamber music. There is also a limited number of choral and orchestral compositions. As a moral support to wartime France, she edited two collections of French soldier songs, Chants de soldats (1525–1915) (Paris, 1915)[7] and Autres chants de soldats (1200–1916) (Paris, 1916).

Some composers dedicated works to her including piano music by Marguerite Balutet (Impromptu, Op. 15 No. 22; 1886)[8] and Paul Dedieu-Péters (Porte close, Op. 58; 1897).[9]

Alice Sauvrezis died in Paris aged 80.

Selected compositions

Published works only.[10]

Orchestral music

Incidental music

Vocal and choral music, except songs

Songs, for voice and piano

Chamber music

Piano music

Organ music

External links

Notes and References

  1. Not in 1865 or 1885, as some sources suggest; see BnF Data.
  2. Vefa de Bellaing: Dictionnaire des compositeurs de musique en Bretagne (Nantes: Ouest Éditions, 1992), p. 228.
  3. Walter Wilson Cobbett: Cobbett's Cyclopedic Survey of Chamber Music (London: Oxford University Press, 1929), vol. 2, p. 329.
  4. De Bellaing (1992).
  5. Axel Klein: Bird of Time. The Music of Swan Hennessy (Mainz: Schott Music, 2019), p. 252.
  6. Klein, Bird of Time (2019), pp. 200, 215–218.
  7. Online at Gallica, see https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k96088349; retrieved 29 April 2020).
  8. Score online at imslp.org; see https://imslp.org/wiki/Feuilles_d'album%2C_Op.15_(Balutet%2C_Marguerite); retrieved 29 April 2020).
  9. Score online at Gallica, see https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k886798h; retrieved 29 April 2020).
  10. Main source: online catalogue of the Bibliothèque nationale de France, as of 29 April 2020).