Trois pièces : Andante, Sérénade et Chant Serbe (arr. Paul Wehage) by Clémence de Grandval Sheet Music for Viola and Piano at Sheet Music Direct
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Trois pièces : Andante, Sérénade et Chant Serbe (arr. Paul Wehage) Digital Sheet Music
Cover Art for "Trois pièces : Andante, Sérénade et Chant Serbe (arr. Paul Wehage)" by Clémence de Grandval PASS

Trois pièces : Andante, Sérénade et Chant Serbe (arr. Paul Wehage)
by Clémence de Grandval Viola and Piano - Digital Sheet Music

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Maria-Félicie-Clémence de Grandval (18281907) was born on January 28, 1828 at Saint-Rémy-des-Monts, France and died on January 15, 1907 in Paris.After the death of her mother, Louise Adèle du Temple de Mésières, her father the Baron de Reiset, a military officer remarried with an Englishwoman and moved his family to London. After beginning her musical studies privately, she studied the piano with the German composer Friedrich von Flotow, who was a family friend. Returning to France, she studied the piano briefly with Chopin and composition with Camille Saint-Saëns, who remember their first meeting: I was 12 when I heard the vicomtesse de Grandval for the first time, who was 18. It was at a musical morning concert at the home of the violinist de Cuvillon. She sang a song of her own composition La Source, in which she accompanied herself. I was struck by the fluidity of her playing, which purely and without useless inflections, was quite close to my way of viewing music. This unified and tranquil style came out of her studies with Chopin. Camille Saint-Saëns: Quelques mots sur lexécution des œuvres de Chopin, in: Le courrier musical de Paris 13 [1910], S. 386).  At first writing mostly sacred music, most of her public success was due to her comic operas: la Comtesse Eva, la Pénitente, Piccolino and Mazeppa. She also wrote orchestral music, chamber music, and over 60 songs (to poets such as Sully Prudhomme, Michel Carré, Henri Meilhac, Georges Hartmann, Charles Grandmougin and Louis Gallet.) She is chiefly known today for her music for wind instruments, especially for the oboe.

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