Maurice Duruflé
Maurice Duruflé was a French composer, organist, and teacher.
Life and career
Duruflé was born in Louviers, Eure in 1902. He became a chorister at the Rouen Cathedral Choir School from 1912 to 1918, where he studied piano and organ with Jules Haelling, a pupil of Alexandre Guilmant. The choral plainsong tradition at Rouen became a strong and lasting influence. At age 17, upon moving to Paris, he took private organ lessons with Charles Tournemire, whom he assisted at Basilique Ste-Clotilde, Paris until 1927. In 1920 Duruflé entered the Conservatoire de Paris, eventually graduating with first prizes in organ with Eugène Gigout, harmony with Jean Gallon, fugue with Georges Caussade, piano accompaniment with César Abel Estyle and composition with Paul Dukas.In 1927, Louis Vierne nominated him as his assistant at Notre-Dame. Duruflé and Vierne remained lifelong friends, and Duruflé was at Vierne's side acting as assistant when Vierne died at the console of the Notre-Dame organ on 2 June 1937, even though Duruflé had become titular organist of St-Étienne-du-Mont in Paris in 1929, a position he held for the rest of his life. In 1930 he won a prize for his Prélude, adagio et choral varié sur le "Veni Creator", and in 1936 he won the Prix Blumenthal. In 1939, he premiered Francis Poulenc's Organ Concerto ; he had advised Poulenc on the registrations of the organ part. In 1943 he became Professor of Harmony at the Conservatoire de Paris, where he worked until 1970; among his pupils were Pierre Cochereau, Jean Guillou and Marie-Claire Alain.
In 1947 he completed probably the most famous of his few pieces: the Requiem op. 9, for soloists, choir, organ, and orchestra. He had begun composing the work in 1941, following a commission from the Vichy regime. Also in 1947, Marie-Madeleine Chevalier became his assistant at St-Étienne-du-Mont. They married on 15 September 1953. The couple became a famous and popular organ duo, going on tour together several times throughout the sixties and early seventies.
He was made a Chevalier de la Legion d'honneur in 1954. He was promoted to an Officier de la Legion d'honneur in 1966.
Perfectionism
Duruflé was highly critical of his own compositions. He particularly disparaged the Toccata from Suite, op. 5, and never recorded it. He never programmed the Toccata, his Sicilienne or the Prelude or Adagio from Veni Creator.He published only a handful of works and often continued to edit and change pieces after publication. For instance, the Toccata from Suite has a completely different ending in the first edition than in the more recent version, and the score to the Fugue sur le nom d'Alain originally indicated accelerando throughout. The result of this perfectionism is that his music, especially his organ music, tends to be well polished, and is still frequently performed in concerts by organists around the world.
Duruflé and his wife were musically conservative. In 1969 they attended a "jazz mass" at St-Étienne-du-Mont. Marie-Madeleine was visibly upset by the experience, and Duruflé called it a scandalous travesty.
Later life and death
Duruflé suffered severe injuries in a car accident on 29 May 1975, and as a result he gave up performing; indeed he was largely confined to his apartment, leaving the service at St-Étienne-du-Mont to his wife Marie-Madeleine. He died in a clinic at Louveciennes in 1986, aged 84, never having fully recovered from the accident.Compositions
Organ solo
- Scherzo op. 2
- Prélude, adagio et choral varié sur le theme du 'Veni Creator' op. 4
- Suite op. 5 :
- * Prélude
- * Sicilienne
- * Toccata
- Prélude et fugue sur le nom d'Alain op. 7
- Prélude sur l'introït de l'epiphanie op. 13
- Fugue sur le thème du de la Cathédrale de Soissons op. 12
- Méditation op. posth.
- Lecture à vue
- Fugue
- Lux aeterna
Chamber music
- Prélude, récitatif et variations op. 3 for flute, viola, and piano
Piano solo
- Triptyque op. 1: Fantaisie sur des thèmes grégoriens
- Trois danses op. 6 :
- * Divertissement
- * Danse lente
- * Tambourin
Piano for 4 hands
- Trois danses op. 6 :
- * Divertissement
- * Danse lente
- * Tambourin
Two pianos
- Trois danses op. 6 :
- * Divertissement
- * Danse lente
- * Tambourin
Orchestral works
- Trois danses op. 6 :
- * Divertissement
- * Danse lente
- * Tambourin
- Andante et scherzo op. 8
Choral works
- Requiem Op. 9:
- * For vocal soloists, choir and orchestra : commissioned as a symphonic poem in 1941; completed in September 1947; first performed on 2 November 1947; published in 1950
- * For the same vocal forces and organ : published in 1948
- * For the same vocal forces, organ and orchestra : published in 1961
- * For the same vocal forces and piano
- Quatre Motets sur des thèmes grégoriens op. 10 for choir a cappella :
- * Ubi caritas et amor
- * Tota pulchra es
- * Tu es Petrus
- * Tantum ergo
- Messe "Cum jubilo" op. 11 for baritone solo, male choir, and orchestra :
- * Version with organ
- * Version with orchestra
- * Version with small orchestra
- Notre Père op. 14 for unison male choir and organ
- * Version for 4-part mixed choir a capella
Miscellaneous works
- Chant Donné: Hommage à Jean Gallon
- Sicilienne from Suite op. 5 for small orchestra
Transcriptions
- Johann Sebastian Bach
- * Two chorales from cantatas BWV 22 and 147, arranged for organ solo, 1952
- * 4 chorales preludes for organ, orchestrated 1942-45:
- ** Nun komm' der Heiden Heiland
- ** Nun freut euch, lieben Christen gmein, BWV 734
- ** O Lamm Gottes unschuldig, BWV 656
- ** In dir ist Freude, BWV 615
- Louis Vierne
- * Soirs étrangers, op. 56, for violoncello and piano, orchestrated 1943:
- ** Grenade
- ** Sur le Léman
- ** Venise
- ** Steppe Canadien
- ** Poisson chinois
- * Ballade du désespéré, op. 61, lyrical poem for tenor solo and piano, orchestrated 1943
- * Three improvisations for organ, transcribed 1954:
- ** Marche épiscopale
- ** Méditation
- ** Cortège
- Maurice Duruflé: Requiem, op. 9, for voices and piano
- Charles Tournemire
- * Five improvisations for organ, transcribed 1956–58:
- ** Petite rapsodie improvisée
- ** Cantilène improvisée
- ** Improvisation sur le Te Deum
- ** Fantaisie-Improvisation sur l'Ave maris stella
- ** Choral-Improvisation sur le Victimae paschali
- Gabriel Fauré: Prelude of Pelléas et Mélisande, transcribed for organ solo
- Robert Schumann: Lamentation, transcribed for organ solo