Marc Vaubourgoin Explained

Jean Joseph Marc Vaubourgoin (19 March 1907 in Caudéran (today a western neighbourhood of Bordeaux) – 1 April 1983 in the 10th arrondissement of Paris[1]) was a 20th-century French composer.

Biography

Marc Vaubourgoin's father, Julien Fernand Vaubourgoin, a composer and teacher, gave him his first music lessons. Marc entered the Conservatoire de Bordeaux and then completed his studies at the Conservatoire de Paris with André Gedalge, Noël Gallon (counterpoint and fugue), Charles-Marie Widor and Paul Dukas (composition). In 1930, he won the 2nd Grand Prix de Rome for his cantata Actéon.

He directed the Conservatoire de Nantes from 1937 to 1943, then became conductor for the Radiodiffusion française. In 1954, he became director of the musicology department of the ORTF. As such, he was interested in exhuming works by composers from the 18th century that had been forgotten until then, such as Hippolyte et Aricie by Jean-Philippe Rameau, while baroque music was not yet in fashion.

Marc Vaubourgoin had two sons who also distinguished themselves in the field of the Arts: Jean-Raphaël Vaubourgoin,[2] an architect and Thierry Vaubourgoin, a painter.

Works

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://archives.bordeaux-metropole.fr/ark:/75241/vta569d995d280d8/daogrp/0/layout:table/idsearch:RECH_7251a7e9ddcfbafaf5b3ae47836e6744#id:1318515433? Archives de Bordeaux Métropole, former commune of Caudéran, birth certificate No 50, year 1907 (page 16/72) (with marginal mention of death)
  2. https://www.abebooks.fr/servlet/BookDetailsPL?bi=17190980948&searchurl=sortby%3D17%26an%3Dvaubourgoin%2Bjean%2Braphael El Real monasterio de Nuestra Señora de Rueda on AbeBooks