André Mangeot

André Louis Mangeot (25 August 1883 – 11 Sept 1970) was a French-born violinist and impresario who later became naturalised in England.[1]

Life

Born in Paris, Mangeot studied at the Conservatoire de Paris before settling in London, where he played initially in the Queen’s Hall Orchestra and at Covent Garden. In 1910 he married Olive Fowke, from whom he was divorced in 1931.[2]

He founded the International String Quartet in 1919, to which he invited the young John Barbirolli to become its cellist. This specialised in modern works, especially by young British composers. Among pieces given their first performances were Maurice Ravel’s String Quartet in 1927[3] and Benjamin Britten’s Phantasy Quartet in 1933. Later he formed the André Mangeot Quartet in 1947.[4]

Mangeot also acted as violin teacher to a number of students who went on to make a name for themselves as musicians, among them Imogen Holst[5] and Anne Macnaghten.[6] Later he summed up the essence of his instruction in his book Violin technique: notes for players and teachers.[7]

gollark: RCEoR now has a fix for the bug where supplied code could mutate the environment given.
gollark: I don't know why it does share the envs, in any case, but still.
gollark: Anyway, the system does run on a whitelist. I am about to implement more security via non-shared envs for each thing.
gollark: Now it's... slightly less jokey maybe?
gollark: Then I thought "Seriously, can't people be reasonable for once?" and implemented sandboxing in secure mode.

References

  1. "Mangeot, André (Louis)". The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Music. 1996 via Encyclopedia.com.
  2. Peter Parker, Isherwood, Pan Macmillan, 2005, pp.118, 218
  3. Robert Philip, Performing Music in the Age of Recording, Yale University, 2004, p.170
  4. MacGregor, Lynda (2001). "Mangeot, André (1883 - 1970), violinist, impresario". Grove Music Online. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.17628.
  5. Christopher Grogan, Rosamund Strode, Imogen Holst: A Life in Music, Boydell & Brewer, 2010 , p.9
  6. Parker, p.218
  7. Dennis Dobson, 1953


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