A deeply researched biography of the great French organist, who
composed some of the best-loved works in the organ repertory -- and
the masterful Requiem. Maurice Durufle: The Man and His Music is a
new biography of the great French organist and composer (1902-86),
and the most comprehensive in any language. James E. Frazier traces
Durufle's musical training, his studies withTournemire and Vierne,
and his career as an organist, church musician, composer,
recitalist, Conservatoire professor, and orchestral musician.
Frazier also examines the career and contributions of Durufle's
wife, the formidable organist Marie-Madeleine Durufle-Chevalier.
Durufle brought the church's unique language of plainsong into a
compelling liaison with the secular harmonies of the modern French
school (as typified by Debussy, Ravel, and Dukas)in works for his
own instrument and in his widely loved masterpiece, the Requiem Op.
9 for soloists, chorus, organ, and orchestra. Drawing on the
accounts of those who knew Durufle personally as well as on
Frazier's own detailed research, Maurice Durufle offers a broad
sketch of this modest and elusive man, widely recognized today for
having created some of the greatest works in the organ repertory --
and the masterful Requiem. James E. Frazier holds advanced degrees
in philosophy, organ, theology, and sacred music from St. Alphonsus
College, Mt. St. Alphonsus Seminary, Hartt School of Music, the
Yale University Divinity School, and the Yale Institute of Sacred
Music. He served Episcopal churches in Hartford, Connecticut, and
St. Paul, Minnesota, as organist and director of music. For ten
years he was director of music for the Archdiocese of St. Paul and
Minneapolis.
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