Picture of author.

Arthur Honegger (1) (1892–1955)

Author of Honegger: Le Roi David

For other authors named Arthur Honegger, see the disambiguation page.

80 Works 153 Members 4 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: Image © ÖNB/Wien

Series

Works by Arthur Honegger

Honegger: Le Roi David (1991) 9 copies
Je suis compositeur (1951) 6 copies
Intrada (1986) 3 copies
Symphonie Liturgique (1986) 2 copies
Jeanne d'Arc au Bucher (2007) 2 copies
Honegger: Sonatine (1986) 1 copy
Two Pieces 1 copy
Symphony 4 1 copy
Ecrits (2000) 1 copy
Pacific 231 (1986) 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1892-03-10
Date of death
1955-11-27
Burial location
Cimetière Saint-Vincent, Paris, France
Gender
male
Nationality
Switzerland
Birthplace
Le Havre, France
Place of death
Paris, France
Places of residence
Paris, France
Education
Zurich Conservatoire
Paris Conservatoire
Occupations
composer
Relationships
Milhaud, Darius (friend)
Claudel, Paul (collaborator)
Organizations
American Academy of Arts and Letters
École Normale de Musique
Awards and honors
Legion d'Honneur (Grand Officier|1954)
Short biography
Arthur Honegger was born to Swiss Protestant parents living in Le Havre, France. He played the violin as a child. After studying for two years at the Zurich Conservatoire (later merged into the Zurich University of the Arts), he attended the Paris Conservatoire from 1911 to 1918. He befriended Darius Milhaud and met various artists and writers, including Apollinaire, Max Jacob, Blaise Cendrars, Pablo Picasso, and Erik Satie. In 1918, he was commissioned to write the score for the avant-garde ballet Le dit des jeux du monde (The Story of the World at Play), which provoked an uproar at its first performance similar to that caused by Stravinsky's Rite of Spring a few years earlier. He rose to fame on the basis of this and his 1921 hit composition Le Roi David (King David). After World War I, he was a member of a group of young modern composers who worked in Montparnasse, collectively known as Les Six, along with Milhaud, Georges Auric, Louis Durey, François Poulenc, and Germaine Tailleferre. In 1926, he married Andrée Vaurabourg, a pianist and fellow Conservatoire student, on the condition that they live in separate apartments. They had one daughter. He also had a son with singer Claire Croiza. Honegger became a prolific composer, writing nine ballets and three vocal stage works, including Jeanne d'Arc au bûcher (Joan of Arc at the Stake, 1935), with libretto by Paul Claudel, which he called a "dramatic oratorio." It's now considered one of his finest works. His chamber music pieces included three string quartets and sonatas for violin, viola, and cello. He composed the music for Abel Gance's epic 1927 silent film, Napoléon, and others. In addition to his pieces written alone, he collaborated with Jacques Ibert on the opera L'Aiglon (1937), and on an operetta. Honegger always maintained his Swiss citizenship, but during the Nazi invasion of France in World War II, he could not bring himself to leave Paris, his city. He secretly joined the French Resistance and was allowed by the Germans to continue his work unimpeded. He taught composition at the École Normale de Musique de Paris. He wrote his last four symphonies during this period of his life. He published an autobiography, Je suis compositeur (I Am a Composer), in 1951. In 1953 he wrote his final musical composition, A Christmas Cantata. After suffering a series of heart attacks beginning in 1947, his health steadily declined and he died in 1955. Milhaud and Poulenc dedicated works to his memory.

Members

Reviews

 
Flagged
mdoerries | Aug 3, 2022 |
 
Flagged
VPALib | Mar 6, 2019 |
A member of "The Six" group of composers in France. However, to speak of Milhaud, Honegger, and Poulenc, we must forget the Six. In their work the spirit of the Six died an early death. Milhaud's personality matured after 1913, and Honegger's after 1915. But since their names had become famous as a result of the activities of the Six, public opinion erred for a time, holding that those activities manifested an aesthetic common to the members of the group. The individual personalities of the composers were not distinguished at first, and the idea took hold that humor, mockery, and satire were to be the aim of any work their imaginations brought forth. At the dress rehearsal of Honegger's Antigone, someone asked us if it would be funny.

Arthur Honegger was born in Le Havre in 1892. His family came from Zurich, but Honegger has spent all his adult life in France. Trained at the Paris Conservatory under Gedalge and Widor, he took Vincent d'Indy's course on conducting, along with Milhaud. His first works were composed around 1916. Honegger belonged to the Nouveaux Jeunes and the Six. But he was not interested in the music-hall movement, and the joy-ful frolics of his friends gave him no pleasure. Moreover, his temperament clashed with Satie's. After contributing to the production of Les Mariés de la Tour Eiffel, he left this milieu, but continued on the best of terms with his friends.

Of the young composers in 1920, Honegger was the only one whose work was mainly symphonic. He devoted himself primarily to compositions for full symphony orchestra, and admired Richard Strauss and Florent Schmitt for their ability to express themselves in large orchestral compositions.

His sudden rise to fame is easy to explain. The public was irritated by new composers whose works it did not understand. It could not follow Stravinsky, Satie, Milhaud, or Schoenberg, all of whom infused music with a new spirit of their own. Honegger said nothing new; he carried on the familiar tradition of Wagner, Strauss, and Florent Schmitt. His thinking was not original. Only the sonority of his music was new, and his innovations were solely of a harmonic order.

Honegger's talent is characterized by his great ability to develop schemes. These are generally short. Unlike Milhaud, Poulenc, or Prokofiev, Honegger has no innate talent for melodic invention, nor does he have their ability to shape musical lines. With the exception of his composition based on six poems from Apollinaire Alcools ( 1916), his melodies for voice and piano are not very interesting. In chamber music, the composer brought his efforts to bear on modernizing the structure of the various movements within the sonata form.
… (more)
 
Flagged
antimuzak | Nov 4, 2006 |

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
80
Members
153
Popularity
#136,480
Rating
4.0
Reviews
4
ISBNs
28
Languages
4
Favorited
1

Charts & Graphs