Author Archives: LN GORY
Récital Benjamin Righetti (orgue) – Festival International 2009
Récital Françoise Dornier (organ) – Soirées Estivales 2009
Récital Guillaume Prieur (organ) – Soirées Estivales 2009
Récital Charlotte Marck (organ) – Soirées Estivales 2009
Récital Patrick Delabre (orgue) – Festival International 2009
Récital Linda Cechova Sitkova (organ) – Festival International 2009
Récital Yohann Tardivel-Erchoff (organ) – Festival International 2009
Dominique Troccaz, oboe
Dominique Troccaz very quickly passionate about music and oboe. She began her studies at the Conservatory of Chambéry, his hometown, and then pursues the Paris region. In 1982, she joined the class of Claude Maisonneuve and she won first prize at the National Conservatory of Rueil Malmaison, where she now teaches oboe and the Conservatory of the 9th district of Paris.
Trained in classical music, Dominica Troccaz participates at sacred music concerts of St. Roch. Easily integrated she was invited regularly in various orchestras since 1985 (Orchestra of Paris, particularly under the direction of Z. Metha and C.M Giulini, as well as the Ensemble Orchestral de Paris, then direction A. Jordan J. Nelson ). Her artistic career, her openness, her musical versatility, drive to become principal oboe of the troop Jerome Savary at the Opéra Comique orchestra for several shows including “La Vie Parisienne”. More recently, she worked as principal oboe with symphony orchestra Divertimento under the direction of Z. Zioucni.
Focusing on music in all its forms, in parallel with her participation in orchestras, she also occurs Training Room (sonata with organ, harp, woodwind quintet, octet wind …) and participates in various recordings varieties (Grand Corps Malade, Adamo …).
Antoine REBOULOT
Antoine Reboulot. Organist, pianist, teacher, composer, (Decize, Nièvre, France, Dec. 17, 1914 – Montreal, July 11, 2002, naturalized Canadian 1978) ; first prize in organ (Cons national de Paris) 1936, first prize in composition (ibid) 1947.
In Paris he studied at the Institut national pour les jeunes aveugles and later with Marcel Dupré (organ), Henri Busser (composition), Georges Caussade (counterpoint), and Simone Plé (fugue) at the conservatory.
In 1939 he won the grand prize for improvisation and performance at France’s Société des Amis de l’orgue. Antoine Reboulot taught piano and pedagogy and was organist successively in Perpignan, in Versailles, and at St-Germain-des-Prés in Paris where he succeeded his teacher André Marchal in 1946. He performed as a pianist and organist in France and several other European countries and in Canada and the United States.
In 1967 Antoine Reboulot settled in Quebec, where he taught piano at the Conservatoire de Trois-Rivières (1967-70) and the CMQ (1970-72). He also taught improvisation, piano, organ, and keyboard harmony at Laval University (1970-78) and the University of Montreal (1972-89).
Antoine Reboulot gave many organ and piano recitals in Ontario and Quebec and took part in the Ars Organi series and the summer concerts at Saint Joseph’s Oratory in Montreal. Some ten of his compositions for organ appeared in publications of the Paris Schola cantorum ; he also wrote piano works and chamber music. He recorded his own Variations sur le nom d’Henri Gagnon (published by Ostiguy in 1987 in Le Tombeau de Henri Gagnon ) on an Alpec LP (see Discography). In 1979, the CBC commissioned him to write “O Crux Ave” for instrumental ensemble, choir, speaker, and organ, recorded by CBC ensembles directed by Raymond Dessaints.
His Choral orné sur le “Pater Noster” for organ was also recorded by Jean-Guy Proulx. He wrote hommage to Louis Vierne with his Cinq Préludes (1992) that he recorded three years later.
In January 1995, he was promoted to the rank of Chevalier in the Ordre national de la Légion d’Honneur for services rendered to French music abroad. In 1998 he was named an “honorary member” of the Fédération québécoise des amis de l’orgue. In 1999 the Festival de Lanaudière presented a concert in his honour, in the course of which his Trio for violon, violoncello and piano was presented for the first time.
Jean-Guy Proulx, Antoine Bouchard, Victor Bouchard, Lise Boucher, Gilles Manny, Renée Morisset, and Sylvain Caron numbered among his pupils.
http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/antoine-reboulot-emc/