LUCIEN DUROSOIR :
Violinist and Composer
(1878-1955)
Born in 1878, Lucien Durosoir enjoyed a career as a violinist
before devoting himself to composition. It was principally in Germany, where
he perfected his technique with the great masters of the art, Joseph Joachim
and Hugo Hermann, that his talent was first recognised. From 1899 onwards, his
musical tours led him across the whole of central Europe, Russia, Germany and
the Austro-Hungarian Empire. In these countries, he gave some of the first performances
of works by French composers (Saint-Saëns, Lalo, Widor and Bruneau). In
Vienna, for example, he performed Gabriel Fauré's Sonata in F Major for
violin and piano. Conversely, he took advantage of his French tours for first
performances of great works by foreign composers: in 1899 at the Salle Pleyel
Niels Gade's Concerto in B Minor, and in 1901 at the Salle des Agriculteurs
Richard Strauss's Concerto for violin, and Brahms's Concerto. Wherever he performed,
the critics wrote about him in the most laudatory terms : "
mesmerises
the audience with the elevation and spirit of his playing" (Neue freie
Press, 11th January 1910). " Each piece was played with both nobility
and beauty " (Wiener Mittags-Zeitung, 28th January 1910). "
In Max Bruch's Concerto, he showed the very rare attributes of tone and musical
quality, and in Dvorak's Concerto, an astonishing style and virtuosity. With
these superb performances, Monsieur Lucien Durosoir has placed himself amongst
the finest virtuosos of his time. " (Le Figaro, 19th May 1904).
War brought a brutal end to this career : he served throughout the period in
the 5th Division, which took part in some of the most bloody exchanges (Douaumont,
the Chemin des Dames and Eparges). General Mangin, who had a sense of prestige,
was keen to create a quartet with Lucien Durosoir as first violin. Henri Lemoine
was second violin, the composer André Caplet played viola and Maurice
Maréchal played " le Poilu ", a famous cello made from
an ammunition crate, which bears the signatures of Foch, Pétain, Mangin
and Gouraud! This instrument is currently at the musical instrument museum in
the Cité de la Musique, Paris.
In between his duties as foot soldier, musician, stretcher bearer and pigeon-keeper,
Lucien Durosoir wrote to his mother every day and more than two thousand letters
have survived. Letters which describe some of the most awful episodes of the
Great War as well as the studious life of the " Mangin Quartet " musicians,
letters which comment on the military hierarchy and the daily conditions of
those in the trenches. On 16th May 1915, he wrote : " Dear Mother, I do
not know what life holds in store for me
but if I were to die
you must take an interest in children, in musicians; take an interest in and
help young violinists, this will fill your time and will be a way of making
me live on ". And on 12th June of the same year : " We have just lived
through ten unforgettable days, the ultimate in horror ".
Lucien Durosoir and André Caplet spent these dreadful years together
and their friendship was sealed just as much in the trenches as when, in retreat
from the front line, they played their music together. The idea of composing
became more strongly embedded in Lucien Durosoir's mind. Thinking about the
end of the war, he wrote, on 12th September 1916 : " I will begin writing
music and thus grow accustomed to producing more liberal works. I'm convinced
that my efforts will bear fruit ". From his demobilisation, in February
1919, he began to organise his future : there was no question of his being able
to take up his career again as a virtuoso. Deeply affected by the horrors which
he experienced at first hand and lived through, and somewhat disillusioned by
the human race, he sought sanctuary in a far corner of France to devote himself to composition.
Between 1920 and 1949, he lived in retirement, far from Paris and artistic circles;
he thus built for himself a style of composing which was very different from
the trends of the time and very brave. André Caplet was not sparing with
his compliments and wrote to him in 1922 : " I will talk with enthusiasm
to all my friends about your quartet which I find a thousand times more interesting
than anything with which the noisy group of newcomers overwhelm us ". Lucien
Durosoir left about forty unpublished works, in various formats, symphonic music
and chamber music, of which a sonata for piano is dedicated to Jean Doyen and
a Caprice for cello and harp is dedicated to Maurice Maréchal "
in memory of Génicourt, winter 1916-1917 ". From 1950 onwards, illness
prevented him from continuing his work and he died in December 1955.
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