Marcel Labey (6 August 1875, Vésinet – 25 November 1968, Nancy) was a French conductor and composer.

Marcel Labey
Born(1875-08-06)6 August 1875
Died25 November 1968(1968-11-25) (aged 93)
NationalityFrench
EducationSchola Cantorum de Paris
Occupations
  • Conductor
  • composer
SpouseCharlotte Sohy

Life edit

He was born to a family of magistrates and studied law in Paris (gaining his doctorate in 1898) before turning to music. He learned piano under Élie-Miriam Delaborde and Louis Breitner, and harmony under René Lenormand. He met Vincent d'Indy who made him follow his courses at the Schola Cantorum. The First World War interrupted his musical studies and career - he was wounded twice and mentioned in dispatches four times.

At the Schola Cantorum, he taught piano and (until the death of Vincent d'Indy) was one of its under-directors, and later became the co-founder and director of the Ecole César Franck (1935-962). He was also secretary of France's Société nationale de musique.

His wife Charlotte Sohy (1887-1955), herself a student of Vincent d'Indy, composed a symphony, melodies, four string quartets and a lyric drama in 3 acts called L'Esclave Couronnée, which adapted a novel by Selma Lagerlöf and was put on at Mulhouse on 6 May 1947.

Works edit

He rediscovered the "esprit franckiste" in his compositions.

Opera edit

Bérangère, liturgical drama in 3 acts (1911–1913 ; Le Havre, 12 April 1929)

Orchestral music edit

  • Fantaisie (1900)
  • 4 symphonies (1903 - 1908 - 1933 - 1940)
  • Ouverture pour un drame (1920 ; Paris, 22 January 1921)
  • Lied for cello and orchestra (1920)
  • Suite champêtre (1922)
  • Eglogue (1943)
  • Triptyque symphonique (1947)
  • Symphonietta for chamber orchestra (1950)
  • Paysages marins (1952)
  • Symphonie pour cordes (1954)
  • Poème for piano and orchestra (1957)

Chamber and instrumental music edit

  • Sonate pour piano (1900)
  • sonates pour violon et piano (1901 - 1924 - 1951 - 1954)
  • Sonate pour alto et piano, op.7 (1904)
  • Quatuor avec piano (1911)
  • Suite pour piano (1914)
  • Quatuors à cordes (1919–1948)
  • 2 Trios avec piano (1922–1937)
  • Quintette avec piano (1929)
  • Trio à cordes (1929)
  • Sonate pour violoncelle et piano (1944)
  • Sextuor à cordes (1959)
  • des pièces pour piano et orgue
  • des mélodies
  • publication of adaptations for piano of several orchestral works by Vincent d'Indy :Symphonie en si bémol, Jour d'été à la montagne, etc.

External links edit