Hervé Désarbre (born in 1957) is a French organist and [organist of the Ministry of Armed Forces].[1] He is titular of the Cavaillé-Coll organ of the Église Notre-Dame du Val-de-Grâce in Paris.[2]
Born in Roanne (Loire), Desarbre studied the piano with Madeleine David, a student of the organist and composer Aloÿs Claussmann, and then worked with André Chometon, professor at the conservatoire de Lyon.
In parallel with his law studies, he turned to the organ and entered master André Fleury's organ class at the Schola Cantorum de Paris. He also sought the advice of Guy Morançon. In 1975, he was appointed organist of the Saint-Louis de Roanne church and, in 1982, honorary organist of the historical organ of Renaison. In 1993, he was appointed titular organist of the historic church of Val-de Grace in Paris, and in 2005, he received the title of organist of the Ministry of Defence (Protocole Culture-Défense). In 2004, he created with the composer, the vocal ensemble La Chapelle-Musique du Val-de-Grâce.[3]
He has participated in several radio and television broadcasts and has played as soloist with various choirs, musical ensembles and orchestras in France and abroad. (brass Quintet of Radio France, mastery of the Primatiale Saint-Jean de Lyon, Choir of the Orchestre de Paris, Groupe Vocal de France, and abroad, the Baltica Philharmony, the Tadeusz Baird Philharmony, the State Academic Symphony Orchestra of the Russian Federation, etc.). He has performed in Paris (Val-de-Grâce, Notre-Dame de Paris, La Madeleine, Saint-Eustache), in France, Russia, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Great Britain, Italy, Belgium, Serbia, Germany, Poland, Spain, Ukraine, Spain. In Moscow, he has already performed several times, alone or with an orchestra, in the big hall of the Moscow Conservatory (whose Medal of Honour he received), the Tchaikovsky Hall and the . In August 2014, he was appointed to the international committee of experts for the restoration of the Cavaillé-Coll Grand Organ by the rector of the Moscow Conservatory. In February 2015, he was invited to play at the Sochi Festival, directed by Yuri Bashmet. In September 2017, he directed the opening concert of the Tchaikovsky Conservatory's "French Seasons" festival in Moscow.[4]
His recitals are mainly devoted to French music of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries as well as Italian and Russian musics. Also interested in today's music, he has created a number of contemporary works for organ alone or with orchestra, some of them dedicated to him. (Ivan Jevtić, François Vercken, Guy Morançon, François-Henri Houbart, Aubert Lemeland, Yuri Kasparov, Dimitri Yanov-Yanovsky,[5] Pierre Cholley,[6] Julien Bret,[7] Andrés Laprida,[8] etc.). Nicolas Bacri and also dedicated to him chamber music works.
Désarbre is a member of several French and international juries (including the Schola Cantorum, the Shostakovich competition, the Edison Denisov competition, etc.), of the musical commission of the French Ministry of Defence, and artistic director of the Le Chant du Monde publishing house. He is also a member of the Camillians family (Order of regular clergy for the sick).
On 26 July 2008, Désarbre was invited to the 50th anniversary of the twinning of Reutlingen with Roanne. Thus he gave a recital to the keyboards of the new organ of the church of Saint Wolfgang with the concert Le Tour du monde en 80 minutes ! De Reutlingen à Moscou en passant par Roanne et New York to mark the centenary of the birth of Olivier Messiaen.[9] Recently in Paris, he created for piano, with the vocal ensemble La Chapelle-Musique of the Val-de-Grâce, the musical setting, by Pierre Cholley, of the famous recipe of the Troisgros brothers, in the presence of Pierre Troisgros. In May 2013, he was invited to play in Renaison for the thirty years of the installation of the historical John Abbey organ.
In 2008, Désarbre was a member of the jury of the International Organ Competition Alexander Goedicke,[10] organized by the Tchaikovsky Conservatory of Moscow and the International Chamber Music Competition Sergei Taneyev. He also chaired the Edison Denisov International Composition Competition in Moscow and again presided over it in 2016. He recently founded with former Schola Cantorum classmates the Association André Fleury of which he is the general secretary.[11]
He has been welcomed as field officer into the military reserve.[12]
Composers Guy Morançon, François Vercken, Max Pinchard, Ramon Lazkano, Jacques Boisgallais, Nicolas Bacri, Youri Kasparov, Elżbieta Sikora, Pierre Cholley, Ivan Jevtic, Dimitry Yanov-Yanovsky, Felix Yanov-Yanovsky, Jean-Louis Petit, Merab Gagnidzé, dedicated to him works for solo organ, organ and orchestra, and chamber music.[17]