Revue et gazette musicale de Paris explained

The was a weekly musical review founded in 1827 by the Belgian musicologist, teacher and composer François-Joseph Fétis, then working as professor of counterpoint and fugue at the Conservatoire de Paris. It was the first French-language journal dedicated entirely to classical music. In November 1835 it merged with Maurice Schlesinger's Gazette musicale de Paris (first published in January 1834) to form Revue et gazette musicale de Paris, first published on 1 November 1835. It ceased publication in 1880.

History

By 1830 the Revue musicale, written and published by Fétis, was on sale at Maurice Schlesinger's music seller's premises.[1] Schlesinger (whose father founded the Berliner allgemeine musikalische Zeitung) was a German music editor who had moved to Paris in 1821. Schlesinger published editions of classical and modern music under his own name at a reasonable price, most notably works by Mozart, Haydn, Weber, Beethoven, Hummel and Berlioz. He also published Robert le diable[2] and Les Huguenots by Giacomo Meyerbeer, as well as La Juive by Fromental Halévy.[3] Schlesinger founded his own rival publication, the Gazette Musicale de Paris, which first appeared on 5 January 1834.[4] [5]

Another music journal, Le Ménestrel, had first appeared the previous month on 1 December 1833.[6] [7] Until La Revue et Gazette ceased publication in 1880, Le Ménestrel was to be its main rival in terms of influence and breadth of coverage.[8]

In 1835, Schlesinger bought the Revue musicale from Fétis and merged the two journals into the Revue et gazette musicale de Paris. He widened the subject matter of the from music itself to also include literature about music – in 1837 he commissioned from Honoré de Balzac for the Gazette the novella Gambara (dealing with the new style of grand opera).[9]

The name Revue musicale returned for six months in 1839 as the Revue musicale, journal des artistes, des amateurs et des théatres while the journal was a bi-weekly publication. The list of contributors to the Revue et gazette musicale in 1840 included: François Benoist, Hector Berlioz, Castil-Blaze, Antoine Elwart, Stephen Heller, Jules Janin, Jean-Georges Kastner, Léon Charles François Kreutzer, Franz Liszt, Édouard Monnais (director of the Paris Opera from 1839 to 1847), Joseph d'Ortigue, Theodor Panofka, Ludwig Rellstab, George Sand, Robert Schumann and Richard Wagner.

The French-language monthly magazine Revue des Deux Mondes, founded in July 1829, also featured a section named "Revue musicale".[10]

Publication chronology, 1827—1850

Revue musicaleFirst series (6 volumes) - published monthly by Fétis.[11]

Second series (9 volumes) - published weekly on Saturdays by Fétis.

Gazette musicale de ParisPublished weekly by Schlesinger on Sundays.
Revue et gazette musicale de ParisAppeared on Sundays.

Schlesinger sold the journal in 1846 to a former employee, Louis Brandus.

The journal was suspended from September 1870 to September 1871 during the Siege of Paris, bringing the Franco-Prussian War to an end.

References

Notes

External links

Notes and References

  1. Vol 7 (Tome VIII, IVme année) (1830) sold by Fétis, Alexandre Mesnier & Schlesinger. See review of Vol. 7 in Revue française, Issues 13-14, p. 281-3.
  2. Full score of Schlesinger's edition of Robert le diable at IMSLP.
  3. vol. 9, p. 9405.
  4. Book: Gazette Musicale de Paris . Ire année, No. 1 . 5 January 1834 . Schlesinger, Maurice (ed.) . fr.
  5. Larousse, p. 286 .
  6. Book: . Le Ménestrel . 1 December 1833 . Année 1, No. 0 . French.
  7. Book: Gautier, Théophile . Théophile Gautier

    . Théophile Gautier . 1995 . Correspondance générale 1865–1867 . Claudine . Lacoste-Veysseyre . Librairie Droz . 2-600-00075-5 . French.

  8. Book: Ellis, Katharine . 2007 . Music Criticism in Nineteenth-Century France . 2 . Cambridge University Press . 978-0-521-03589-7.
  9. René Guise, La Pléiade, p. 1517. Pierre Brunel, "", Folio Classique, 1995, pp. 318–9 comprising Gambara, Sarrasine, Massimilla Doni.
  10. eg "Revue musicale", Revue des deux Mondes, 1 October 1834, p. 482.
  11. The first issue was published in February 1827, and until December 1833 each publication year thus runs from February to the end of the following January. Modern library catalogues may include the bound volumes as if the years began on 1 January, which can lead to confusion.
  12. Page 625 of Vol. 6 contains an announcement of a new series of the journal to incorporate serious analysis of new compositions, along with improved technology for printing musical examples ("les perfectionnemens de fabrication thypographique"). The new series begins on 6 Feb 1830. Vol. 6 also contains a cumulative index of the first 6 volumes.
  13. https://www.schubertiademusic.com/items/details/3153-fetis-francoisjoseph-revue-musicale-deuxi%C3%A8me-s%C3%A9rie-quatri%C3%A8me-ann%C3%A9e-tome-x-e-livraison Quatrième année, Tome X
  14. Published on Saturdays from at least February 1831.
  15. See note in Bindseil, H. E. (1839) Akustik (in German), p. 68
  16. See General search at Internet Culturale (Italian website)
  17. This sequence of weekly issues doesn't seem to have a general digitised index. Adding one to the final number in the URL will access the next issue - eg DF1833-001, DF1833-002, etc. NB Nos. 049-052 are for the VIth year, January 1833
  18. Issue no. 1 of the VIIIth year is dated 5 January 1834, which aligns the year of publication with the first week of the New Year.
  19. See note in Fétis, F-J, Biographie universelle des musiciens..., Volume 4 (in French), p. 460
  20. "La Revue Musicale passe, avec armes et baggages, enseignes déployés et tous les honneurs de la guerre, a la Gazette musicale".
  21. Revue musicale, journal des artistes, des amateurs et des théatres . Masthead . 3 January 1839 . 6 . 1 . 1 .
  22. NB The date of the first issue is misprinted 6 Janvier 1838 instead of 1839.