Jean-Pierre Maurin

Jean-Pierre Maurin (14 February 1822 – 16 March 1894) was a French violinist and pedagogue.[1]

Career

Maurin was a student of Baillot and Habeneck at the Conservatoire de Paris. In 1875 he succeeded to the post of Jean-Delphin Alard as a professor of violin at the same institution. Contemporary sources attest to the significance of his performance activities:

...the cofounder of the Society for the Last Quartets of Beethoven... [he] and his string quartet contributed significantly to the growing understanding in Paris of Beethoven's late works. Richard Wagner, a severe critic, heard the Maurin Quartet in 1861 in Paris and described the performance as "most perfect."[2]

The most famous of his pupils was Lucien Capet, who was to become the leader of the Capet Quartet and the teacher of Ivan Galamian.

gollark: If you look at, say, HTTP internet radio stations which use ogg streams, then they appear to browsers and such as audio files which keep getting longer. I assume the format just allows you to stick ogg packets on the end and don't care much about declared length.
gollark: Are you implying a Discord server is more private than your actual computer or something?
gollark: I am DELIBERATELY reposting, "PyroBot".
gollark: It rickrolled me on the web version (Firefox). Differences in ogg parsing maybe.
gollark: https://media.discordapp.net/attachments/549759333014044673/795475287511924766/IMG_3266-1.png

References

  1. Riemann, Hugo (1908). Encyclopaedic Dictionary of Music. Theo. Presser.
  2. Schwarz, Boris (1983). Great Masters of the Violin: From Corelli and Vivaldi to Stern, Zukerman, and Perlman. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 9780671225988.
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