Louis Drouet

Louis-François-Philippe Drouet (14 April 1792 – 30 September 1873) was a 19th-century French flautist and composer.

Louis Drouet
Louis Drouet
Born
Louis-François-Philippe Drouet

14 April 1792
Amsterdam
Died30 September 1873(1873-09-30) (aged 81)
Bern
OccupationFlautist
Composer

Biography

Born of a French father expatriated in the Netherlands and barber by profession, Louis Drouet began learning to play the flute as a self-taught man before entering the Conservatoire de Paris at the age of seven.

At 16, he was first flutist and teacher of Louis Bonaparte, Napoléon's brother, and King of Holland. After touring trips to England, the United States and Europe, in 1840 he became director of music by the Duke of Saxe-Cobourg-Gotha.

Drouet was a great friend of Felix Mendelssohn. William Gordon, co-inventor of the Boehm system, and Wilhelm Popp were among his pupils. He was often referred to as the "Paganini of flute".

Works

The musicologist Arthur Pougin wanted to attribute to Louis Drouet (apparently wrongly) the melody of the unofficial hymn of the Second French Empire, Partant pour la Syrie, although considered as having been composed by Hortense de Beauharnais, Queen of Holland from 1806 to 1810, and Napoléon III's mother.[1]

Compositions
  • 10 concertos
  • more than 20 duets, trios, solos and fantasies
  • more than 300 studies
Pedagogic method
  • Méthode pour la flûte, ou Traité complet et raisonné pour apprendre à jouer de cet instrument, Paris : A. J. Pleyel et fils aîné, 1828,[2] Mayence & Anvers : B. Schott, 1829[3] translation into English under the title Drouët's Method of Flute Playing, London: R. Cocks, 1830[4] reissued in French by Arlette Biget and Michel Giboureau in Flûte traversière : méthodes, traités, périodiques, vol. III, Courlay : J. M. Fuzeau, 2005.[5]

References

Bibliography

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