Paul Ladmirault


Paul Émile Ladmirault was a French composer and music critic whose music expressed his devotion to Brittany. Claude Debussy wrote that his work possessed a "fine dreamy musicality", commenting on its characteristically hesitant character by suggesting that it sounded as if it was "afraid of expressing itself too much". Florent Schmitt said of him: "Of all the musicians of his generation, he was perhaps the most talented, most original, but also the most modest". Peter Warlock dedicated his Capriol Suite to him and Swan Hennessy his Trio, Op. 54.

Life

Ladmirault was born in Nantes. A child prodigy, he learned piano, organ and violin from an early age. At the age of eight, he composed a sonata for violin and piano. At the age of fifteen, when still a student of the Nantes High School, he wrote a three-act opera Gilles de Retz. It was first performed on 18 May 1893.
He was admitted to the Paris Conservatoire to study under Gabriel Fauré, learning harmony under Antoine Taudou and counterpoint from André Gedalge. He orchestrated a few works by Fauré. Like his fellow students – Maurice Ravel, Florent Schmitt, Louis Aubert, Jean Roger-Ducasse, Georges Enesco – he had become well known before he left the Conservatory. In 1903, he wrote a Breton Suite in three movements and then the Brocéliande de matin. These two works were orchestral extracts from his second opera Myrdhin, an epic work which he worked on from 1902-9, and continued to revise until 1921, but which has never been performed.
He also wrote Young Cervantes for small orchestra, Valse triste and Épousailles for piano and orchestra. The ballet La Prêtesse de Korydwenn was first performed at the Paris Opéra on 17 December 1926.
In the field of religious music, he wrote a brief mass for organ and choir and a Tantum ergo for voice, organ and orchestra.
He also wrote articles on music in various periodicals. Appointed professor of harmony and counterpoint at the Nantes conservatoire, Ladmirault rarely left the Nantes region, calling himself a "homebody" who disliked to travel.
He died in Kerbili en Kamoel, St. Nagoire, France.

Breton Celticism

All Ladmirault's music is imbued with his attachment to Brittany. It is found throughout his Gaelic Rhapsody, Briere, Forest and a symphony. He was also closely associated with Breton nationalism. He advocated cultural autonomy for Brittany in the face of the centralisation of French culture in Paris and became a subscriber of the Breton fascist paper Breiz da Zont, an offshoot of the Breton Autonomist Party. He also joined the artistic group Seiz Breur. He was initiated into the Celtic esotericist movement led by François Jaffrenou. In 1908, the Gorsedd of Brittany nominated him as a Druid, and he took up the bardic name 'Oriav'. In 1912, Ladmirault was one of the founding members of the short-lived Association des Compositeurs Breton. He composed music on Celtic themes, such as the ballet La Prêtesse de Korydwenn and the symphonic poem he wrote as musical accompaniment for the film La Brière. He worked on translations of ancient Gallic texts.
In 1928, Ladmirault published a manifesto of Breton music in the first issue of the Celticist journal Kornog. He argued that Breton composers should follow the example of the Mighty Handful, the Russian nationalist musical group, by rejecting German and Italian musical models and relying on folk traditions and pentatonic scales. Nevertheless, he took the view that Breton folk music was cruder than its "civilised" Irish and Scottish counterparts. He justified his use of only Irish musical sources in his Celtic ballet La Prêtesse de Korydwenn, writing "several themes, jigs, war dances are Irish. You would find no borrowings from Breton folk music".
In 1929, he helped to found the Nantes Celtic Circle.

Selected works

Opera and ballet

  1. Gilles de Retz, opera, performed at Nantes, 18 May 1893
  2. Myrdhin, opera, completed 1921
  3. La Prêtesse de Korydwenn, ballet performed by l'Opéra-Comique, 17 December 1926
  4. Glycères, operetta

    Orchestral music

  5. Symphony, four movements
  6. En Forêt, symphonic poem, performed Paris, 31 January 1932
  7. Suite bretonne
  8. Tristan et Iseult, incidental music
  9. Valse triste for piano and orchestra, performed at Paris, 4 March 1934
  10. Brocéliande au matin, symphonic poem, Concerts Colonne, 28 November 1909
  11. Épousailles, for piano and orchestra
  12. La Brière, orchestral suite, 1925
  13. La Jeunesse de Cervantès, for small orchestra

    Chamber music

  14. Fantaisie for violin and piano
  15. Chevauchée, fantasia on Scottish reels, for piano trio
  16. Romance for string quartet
  17. The River, for piano trio
  18. Mémoires d'un âne, after Sophie Rostopchine, Comtesse de Ségur
  19. Carillon
  20. Sonata for violin and piano
  21. String Quartet
  22. String Quintet
  23. De l'ombre à la clarté, for violin and piano
  24. Chorale et variations, for wind quintet and piano
  25. Sonata for violoncello and piano
  26. Sonata for clarinet and piano

    Piano music

  27. Quatre Pièces. Contains: Impromptu; Regrets; Plaisanterie; Valse fantastique.
  28. Rhapsodie gaélique, for piano duet
  29. Variations sur des airs de biniou trécorois , for piano duet
  30. Suite bretonne, for piano duet
  31. Musiques rustiques, for piano duet
  32. Quatre Esquisses. Contains: Chemin creux; Valse mélancolique; Vers l'église dans le soir; Minuit dans les clairières
  33. Mémoires d'un âne
  34. Deux Danses bretonnes

    Songs (voice and piano)

  35. J'ai peur de t'aimer
  36. Madrigal
  37. Spleen
  38. Lied
  39. Quelques chansons de Bretagne et de Vendée, 2 vols
  40. Quelques vieux cantiques bretons
  41. Noëlz anciens composés en l'honneur de Notre-Seigneur Jésus-Christ
  42. Mélodieux automne
  43. Gnomes
  44. Six cantiques bretons du XVIIe siècle
  45. Triolets à Catherine
  46. Chansons de marins

    Other vocal music

  47. Old Melodies, for tenor, string quartet and piano
  48. Messe brève, for choir and organ
  49. Tantum ergo for voice, organ and orchestra