Henry Malherbe Explained

Henri Émile Hermand Malherbe, also known as Henry Malherbe or Henry Croisilles (4 February 1886  - 17 March 1958) was a French writer.[1]

Life and career

Malherbe was born in Bucharest.[2] In Paris he wrote for Le Temps,[3] the magazine Excelsior,[4] and later for La Revue des vivants, ("organe de la génération de la guerre"), of which he was co-director with Henry de Jouvenel.[5]

Malherbe fought in the First World War. In 1919 he was a co-founder and first president of the . In 1953 the association established the Henry Malherbe Prize for essays in his honour.[1] In 1917 Malherbe won the Prix Goncourt for the novel La flamme au poing,[1] (literally, "The Flame in the Fist", published in English translation in 1918 as The Flame that is France).[6] In 1918 the reviewer in the magazine North American Review wrote:

Music

Malherbe took a particular interest in musical matters. His interview with Claude Debussy in 1911 is quoted extensively by the composer's biographer Léon Vallas;[7] his criticisms of the Conservatoire de Paris for what he saw as its reactionary agenda and declining standards were reported in Britain and the US, in The Times and by Richard Aldrich, music critic of The New York Times.[8] As a critic, Malherbe was less inclined than some of his colleagues to take new works at face value: he spotted, as many other critics did not, what he called "the heated eroticism" that lay below the seemingly "innocent neoclassical surface" of Francis Poulenc's 1924 ballet Les biches.[9]

In his book about Bizet's Carmen, published in 1951, Malherbe offered what the journal Hommes et mondes called an analysis "of rare lucidity" of the origins, libretto and score of the opera, and presented hitherto unpublished information about the circumstances of the composer's early death; in this Malherbe raised the possibility that unhappy in love and in despair at "the conspiracy of critics who had condemned Carmen", Bizet may not have died of illness but had killed himself.[10]

Malherbe's other books on music attracted some adverse comment from his contemporaries for his propensity to speculate about his subjects. His biography of Schubert (1949) was criticised in Music & Letters for "sketches circumstantially describing scenes for which we have not a shred of evidence. … M. Malherbe allows himself again and again to be carried away by his enthusiasm into writing bookstall fiction."[11] His 1938 Richard Wagner révolutionnaire also suffered from some "rather fictitious" biography, according to the Revue De Musicologie.[12]

Later years

Malherbes was appointed a Commandeur de la Légion d'Honneur in April 1953.[1] He died in Paris in 1958, at the age of 72.[2]

Works

English Translations

Notes, references and sources

Sources

. Léon Vallas . Maire O'Brien . Grace O'Brien . Claude Debussy: His Life and Works . 1933 . Oxford . Oxford University Press . 458329645 .

Notes and References

  1. http://www.lesecrivainscombattants.fr/prix/les-prix-litteraires "Les prix littéraires"
  2. http://data.bnf.fr/13008789/henry_malherbe/ "Henry Malherbe (1886–1958)"
  3. Blake, p. 82
  4. Vallas, p. 224
  5. http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k1126330.r=%22Henry%20Malherbe%22?rk=42918;4 La Revue des vivants
  6. https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/494447606 "The Flame that is France"
  7. Vallas, pp. 224–226
  8. Young Musicians, The Times, 4 August 1928, p. 10
  9. Malherbe, Henry. Chronique musicale – "Les spectatrices écoutent l'ouvrage, dont la forme néo-classique enveloppe finement le vif érotisme", quoted in Christopher Moore. "Camp in Francis Poulenc's Early Ballets", The Musical Quarterly, Vol. 95, No. 2/3 (Summer-Fall 2012), p. 319
  10. "B. S." "Carmen by Henry Malherbe", Hommes et mondes, July 1951, p. 311 (in French)
  11. "E. B." "Franz Schubert: son amour, ses amitiés by Henry Malherbe", Music & Letters, vol. 30, no. 4, 1949, p. 390
  12. "J.-G. P." "Wagner révolutionnaire by Henry Malherbe", Revue De Musicologie, vol. 21, no. 1, 1942, pp. 12–13 (in French)