Conservatoire de Strasbourg

The Conservatoire de Strasbourg is a music conservatory located in Strasbourg, France. The school was created using funds given to the city of Strasbourg by arts patron Louis Apffel in 1839. The conservatoire's first day of classes began on 3 January 1855.

History of the Conservatory of Strasbourg

It is indeed this considerable amount of the legacy Apffel which allowed the municipality to establish a conservatory which also emanated a symphonic orchestra, historically born the second in France after Paris.

In 1922 the Conservatory moved into the building now occupied by the National Theatre of Strasbourg. It shared the building with the TNS until 1995, when it moved into two temporary accommodations in the Laiterie (fr:La Laiterie) and at 4, rue Brûlée, until a custom-built centre was completed in the new Rivétoile development, the Cité de la Musique et de la danse, which was inaugurated in 2006. [1]

After the direction of Franz Stockhausen (1871 to 1908) the composer Hans Pfitzner assumed the role as one of his positions in the musical life of the city. On the return of Alsace to France, Ernest Munch took over as director for a year, succeeded by Jean-Guy Ropartz (1919–29). From 1929 to 1960 the director was Fritz Münch, who on his retirement was succeeded by Louis Martin.[2]

gollark: This is done by "mpd", the "music player daemon", which maintains a queue, playlists, metadata library, and that sort of thing.
gollark: Now, this music is very musical. But it must be played in some order and streamed out to people.
gollark: So! osmarks internet radio™ runs off some music harvested from YouTube and such and stored on our primary server.
gollark: From that.
gollark: In 32 million μs.

References

  1. "Strasbourg inaugure sa Cité de la Musique et de la Danse". Concert Classic.com. 2006-05-09. Archived from the original on 2012-03-13. Retrieved 2013-12-05.
  2. Braun, Jean. Le conservatoire de Strasbourg de 1855 à 1967. In: La Musique en Alsace hier et aujourd'hui. Librairie Istra, Strasbourg, 1970, p323-326.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.