Jules Sylvain

Axel Stig Hansson (11 June 1900 – 29 October 1968), known professionally as Jules Sylvain, was a Swedish composer, screenwriter and musician.

Jules Sylvain
Jules Sylvain in 1931
Background information
Birth nameAxel Stig Hansson
Born(1890-06-11)11 June 1890
Stockholm, Sweden
Died29 October 1968(1968-10-29) (aged 78)
Castiglione della Pescaia, Italy
Occupation(s)composer, screenwriter, musician

Sylvain was born in Stockholm to actor Axel Hansson and actress and pedagog Valborg Hansson.[1] At the age of 11, Sylvain began studying music at Lundsbergs boarding school but ran away from the school after four years. He studied piano lessons at Musikaliska Akademien between 1918 and 1920 and then continued to study at Music high school in Weimar between 1920 and 1922. He got his first income in 1918 as a café pianist in Stockholm. After that he worked as a musician in Germany for a few years. At his home coming in 1923 he made a name for himself at Kristallsalongen with the melodi Det är den dagliga dosisen som gör'et. During 1925 until 1928, Sylvain was employed as a chapel master for Karl Gerhard and composed a number of the singers songs.[2]

As soon as the sound-film became established Sylvain started composing film music the first melody was Säg det i toner 1929, he was also for several years a musical advisor for Svensk Filmindustri.[3] Sylvain composed several operetes the most known one is Zorina which had its premiere at the Stockholmsoperan in 1943. Sylvain also re-worked the music for the opera "Glada Änkan" for its relaunch in 1931. It is not completely known as to why Stig Hansson became Jules Sylvain sometime during the 1920s.[4]

One theory is that it was Ernst Rolf who thought that a successful composer could not have such a regular name as Stig Hansson. Another theory is that he looked in a lexicon and got his eyes on the French composer with the name Sylvain and then combined the first name of his youth favourite author Jules Verne. Another is that he admired the French composer Maurice Yvain, and because of that wanted a name that sounded similar.[5]

Known melodies

Bor du hemma hos din mamma (1926), Jag är ute när gumman min är inne (1926), Anna du kan väl stanna (1927), Får jag låna nyckeln, Ann-Marie (1929), Titta in i min lilla kajuta (1930), Beate-Christine (1931), Ett litet svärmeri (1931), Tangokavaljeren (1932), När tvenne hjärtan slå samma slag (1933), Vintergatan (1936), Klart till drabbning (1937), Med en enkel tulipan (1938), Det kommer en vår (1940), Jag vet ett litet hotell (1940), Vi har så mycket att säga varandra (1940), Löjtnantshjärtan (1942), Räkna de lyckliga stunderna blott (1944), Sång om syrsor (1961) och De stora elefanternas dans (1966).[6]

Selected filmography

gollark: It's an "autonomous commune" in... Seattle or something.
gollark: It's apparently big enough that you would need something like 20 high-end compute GPUs, so... quite a lot of raspberry pis.
gollark: The trouble with this is that scaling it up like this requires ridiculous amounts of computing resources, and now it's so big that individuals probably can't even tractably run it.
gollark: It can add somewhat larger numbers!
gollark: https://slatestarcodex.com/2020/06/10/the-obligatory-gpt-3-post/

References

  1. "Jules Sylvain, Stig Hansson". Atspace. Retrieved 23 October 2014.
  2. Folkan – Jules Sylvain Archived 2 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine
  3. "A Stig (Jules Sylvain) Hansson – Svenskt Biografiskt Lexikon". Riksarkivet.se. Retrieved 23 October 2014.
  4. Martin Kristenson. "Stupido i Jules Sylvains fotspår". Kaptenstofil.se. Retrieved 23 October 2014.
  5. Dan Koehl – Aumpage Network. "Jules Sylvain". Retrieved 23 October 2014.
  6. "Jules Sylvains melodier – ett urval". Julessylvain.se. Retrieved 23 October 2014.
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