Nadia Boulanger

Nadia Boulanger

born on 16/9/1887 in Paris, Île-de-France, France

died on 22/10/1979 in Paris, Île-de-France, France

Nadia Boulanger

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Juliette Nadia Boulanger (French pronunciation: [y.ljt na.dja bu.l.e]; 16 September 188722 October 1979) was a French composer, conductor, and teacher who taught many of the leading composers and musicians of the 20th century. She also performed as a pianist and organist.[1]

From a musical family, she achieved early honours as a student at the Paris Conservatoire but, believing that she had no particular talent as a composer, she gave up writing music and became a teacher. In that capacity, she influenced generations of young composers, especially those from the United States and other English-speaking countries. Among her students were those who became leading composers, soloists, and conductors, including Aaron Copland, John Eliot Gardiner, Elliott Carter, Dinu Lipatti, Igor Markevitch, Quincy Jones, Philip Glass and Ástor Piazzolla.

Boulanger taught in the US and England, working with music academies including the Juilliard School, the Yehudi Menuhin School, the Longy School, the Royal College of Music and the Royal Academy of Music, but her principal base for most of her life was her family's flat in Paris, where she taught for most of the seven decades from the start of her career until her death at the age of 92.

Boulanger was the first woman to conduct many major orchestras in America and Europe, including the BBC Symphony, Boston Symphony, Hallé, New York Philharmonic and Philadelphia orchestras. She conducted several world premieres, including works by Copland and Stravinsky.

Biography

Early life and education

Nadia Boulanger was born in Paris on 16 September 1887, to composer and pianist Ernest Boulanger (1815-1900) and his wife Raissa Myshetskaya (1856-1935), a Russian princess. They had a daughter who died as an infant before Nadia was born. Nadia was born on her father's 72nd birthday.

Ernest had studied at the Paris Conservatoire and in 1835 won the coveted Prix de Rome for composition at the age of 20. He wrote comic operas and incidental music for plays, but was most widely known for his choral music. He achieved distinction as a director of choral groups, teacher of voice and a member of choral competition juries. After years of rejection, in 1872 he was appointed to the Paris Conservatoire as professor of singing.[2]

Raissa qualified as a home tutor (or governess) in 1873. According to Ernest, he and Raissa met in Russia in 1873, and she followed him back to Paris. She joined his voice class at the Conservatoire in 1876, and they were married in Russia in 1877.[3]

Through Nadia's early years, although both parents were very active musically, the girl would get upset by hearing music and hide until it stopped.[4] When Boulanger was five, Raissa became pregnant again. During the pregnancy, Boulanger's response to music changed drastically. "One day I heard a fire bell. Instead of crying out and hiding, I rushed to the piano and tried to reproduce the sounds. My parents were amazed."[5] After this, Boulanger paid great attention to the singing lessons her father gave, and began to study the rudiments of music.[6]

(Marie-Juliette Olga) Lili was born in 1893, when Nadia was six. When Ernest brought Nadia home from their friends' house, before she was allowed to see her mother or Lili, he made her promise solemnly to be responsible for the new baby's welfare. He urged her to take part in her sister's care.[7]

From the age of seven, Nadia Boulanger studied hard in preparation for her Conservatoire entrance exams, sitting in on their classes and having private lessons with its teachers. Lili often stayed in the room for these lessons, sitting quietly and listening.[8]

Boulanger entered the Conservatoire in 1896 at the age of nine. She came third in the 1897 solfège competition, and subsequently worked hard to win first prize in 1898. She took private lessons from Vierne and Guilmant. During this period, she also received religious instruction to become an observant Catholic, taking her First Communion on 4 May 1899. The Catholic religion remained important to her for the rest of her life.[9]

When Ernest died in 1900, money became a problem for Raissa and the family. She had an extravagant lifestyle, and the royalties she received from performances of Ernest's music were insufficient to live on permanently. Boulanger continued to work hard at the Conservatoire to become a teacher and be able to contribute to her family's support.[10]

Boulanger won the Conservatoire's first prize in harmony in 1903; she continued studies for another years, although she had begun to earn money through organ and piano performances. She studied composition with Fauré and, in the 1904 competitions, she came first in three categories: organ, accompagnement au piano and fugue (composition). At her accompagnement exam, Boulanger met Raoul Pugno,[11] a renowned French pianist, organist and composer, who subsequently took an interest in her career.[12]

In the autumn of 1904, Boulanger began to teach from the family apartment at 36, rue Ballu.[13] In addition to the private lessons she held there, Boulanger started holding a Wednesday afternoon group class in analysis and sightsinging. She continued these almost to her death. This class was followed by her famous "at homes", salons at which students could mingle with professional musicians and Boulanger's other friends from the arts, such as Stravinsky, Valéry, Fauré, etc.[13][14]

Professional life

Boulanger was a keen composer in the years after she left the Conservatoire, encouraged by both Pugno and Fauré. Caroline Potter, writing in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, says of Boulanger's music: "Her musical language is often highly chromatic (though always tonally based), and Debussy's influence is apparent."[12] Her goal was to win the First Grand Prix de Rome as her father had done, and she worked tirelessly towards it in addition to her increasing teaching and performing commitments. She first submitted work for judging in 1906, but failed to make it past the first round. In 1907 she progressed to the final round but again did not win.[15]

In late 1907 she was appointed to teach elementary piano and accompagnement au piano at the newly created Conservatoire Femina-Musica. She was also appointed as assistant to Henri Dallier, the professor of harmony at the Conservatoire.[16]

In the 1908 Prix de Rome competition, Boulanger caused a stir by submitting an instrumental fugue rather than the required vocal fugue.[12] The subject was taken up by the national and international newspapers, and was resolved only when the French Minister of Public Information decreed that Boulanger's work be judged on its musical merit alone. She won the Second Grand Prix for her cantata, La Sirène.[12][17]

In 1908, as well as performing piano duets in public concerts, Boulanger and Pugno collaborated on composing a song cycle, Les Heures claires, which was well-received enough to encourage them to continue working together.[18] Still hoping for the First Grand Prix de Rome, Boulanger entered the 1909 competition but failed to win a place in the final round.[19] Later that year, her sister Lili, then sixteen, announced to the family her intention to become a composer and win the Prix de Rome herself.[20]

In 1910, Annette Dieudonné became a student of Boulanger's, continuing with her for the next fourteen years.[21] When her studies ended, she began teaching Boulanger's students the rudiments of music and solfège. She was Boulanger's close friend and assistant for the rest of her life.

Boulanger attended the premiere of Diaghilev's ballet The Firebird in Paris, with music by Stravinsky. She immediately recognised the young composer's genius and began a lifelong friendship with him.[22]

In April 1912, Nadia Boulanger made her debut as a conductor, leading the Société des Matinées Musicales orchestra. They performed her 1908 cantata La Sirène, two of her songs, and Pugno's Concertstück for piano and orchestra. The composer played as soloist.[23]

With the advent of war in Europe in 1914, public programs were reduced, and Boulanger had to put her performing and conducting on hold. She continued to teach privately and to assist Dallier at the Conservatoire. Nadia was drawn into Lili's expanding war work, and by the end of the year, the sisters had organised a sizable charity, the Comité Franco-Américain du Conservatoire National de Musique et de Déclamation. It supplied food, clothing, money, letters from home, etc. to soldiers who had been musicians before the war.[24]

Weakened by her work on the war, Lili began to suffer ill health. She died in March 1918.

Life after Lili's death

In 1919, Boulanger performed in more than twenty concerts, often programming her own music and that of her sister.[25] Since the Conservatoire Femina-Musica had closed during the war, Alfred Cortot and Auguste Mangeot opened a new music school in Paris, which opened later that year, the École normale de musique de Paris. Boulanger was invited by Cortot to join the school, where she ended up teaching classes in harmony, counterpoint, musical analysis, organ and composition.[12]

Mangeot also asked Boulanger to contribute articles of music criticism to his paper Le Monde Musical, and she occasionally provided articles for this, and other newspapers, for the rest of her life, though she never felt at ease setting her opinions down for posterity in this way.[26]

In 1920, Boulanger began to compose again, writing a series of songs to words by Camille Mauclair. In 1921, she performed at two concerts in support of women's rights, at both of which music by Lili was programmed.[27] Later in life she claimed never to have been involved with feminism, and that women should not have the right to vote as they "lacked the necessary political sophistication."[28]

The American School at Fontainebleau

In the summer of 1921 the French Music School for Americans opened in Fontainebleau, with Boulanger listed on the programme as a professor of harmony.[29] She inaugurated the custom, which would continue for the rest of her life, of inviting the best students to her summer residence at Gargenville one weekend for lunch and dinner. Among the students attending the first year at Fontainebleau was Aaron Copland.[30]

Boulanger's unrelenting schedule of teaching, performing, composing, writing letters etc. started to take its toll on her health; she had frequent migraines and toothaches. She stopped writing as a critic for Le Monde musical as she could not attend the requisite concerts. To maintain the living standard for her and her mother, she concentrated on teaching. This was her most lucrative source of income.[31] Fauré believed she was mistaken to stop composing, but she told him, "If there is one thing of which I am certain, it is that I wrote useless music."[32]

In 1924, Walter Damrosch, Arthur Judson and the New York Symphony Society arranged for Boulanger to tour the US towards the end of the year. She set sail on the Cunard flagship

on Christmas Eve. The ship arrived on New Year's Eve in New York after an extremely rough crossing.[33] During this tour, she performed solo organ works, pieces by Lili, and premiered Copland's new Symphony for Organ and Orchestra, which he had written for her.[12] She returned to France on 28 February 1925.[34]

Later that year, Boulanger approached the publishers Schirmer to enquire if they would be interested in publishing her methods of teaching music to children. When nothing came of this, she abandoned trying to write about her ideas.[35]

Gershwin visited Boulanger in 1927, asking for lessons in composition. They spoke for half an hour after which Boulanger announced, "I can teach you nothing." Taking this as a compliment, Gershwin repeated the story many times.[36]

The Great Depression increased social tensions in France. Days after the Stavisky riots in February 1934, and in the midst of the general strike, Boulanger resumed conducting. She made her Paris debut with the orchestra of the École normale in a programme of Mozart, Bach, and Jean Françaix.[37] Boulanger's private classes continued; Elliott Carter recalled that students who did not dare to cross Paris through the riots only showed that they did not "take music seriously enough".[38] By the end of the year, she was conducting the Orchestre Philharmonique de Paris in the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées with a programme of Bach, Monteverdi and Schütz.[39]

Her mother Raissa died in March 1935, after a long decline. This freed Boulanger from some of her ties to Paris, which had prevented her from taking up teaching opportunities in the United States.[35]

Touring and recording

In 1936, Boulanger substituted for Alfred Cortot in some of his piano masterclasses, coaching the students in Mozart's keyboard works.[40] Later in the year, she traveled to London to broadcast her lecture-recitals for the BBC, as well as to conduct works including Schütz, Fauré and Lennox Berkeley. Noted as the first woman to conduct the London Philharmonic Orchestra, she received acclaim for her performances.[12][41]

Boulanger's long-held passion for Monteverdi culminated in her recording six discs of madrigals for HMV in 1937. This brought his music to a new, wider audience.[42] Though received very well in most quarters, some reviewers took issue with her use of modern instruments.[43]

When Hindemith published his The Craft of Musical Composition, Boulanger asked him for permission to translate the text into French, and to add her own comments. Hindemith never responded to her offer. After he fled from Nazi Germany to the United States, they did not discuss the matter further.[44]

Late in 1937, Boulanger returned to Britain to broadcast for the BBC and hold her popular lecture-recitals. In November, she became the first woman to conduct a complete concert of the Royal Philharmonic Society in London, which included Fauré's Requiem and Monteverdi's Amor (Lamento della ninfa).[45] Describing her concerts, Mangeot wrote,

She never uses a dynamic level louder than mezzo-forte and she takes pleasure in veiled, murmuring sonorities, from which she nevertheless obtains great power of expression. She arranges her dynamic levels so as never to have need of fortissimo...[46]

In 1938, Boulanger returned to the US for a longer tour. She had arranged to give a series of lectures at Radcliffe, Harvard, Wellesley and the Longy School of Music, and to broadcast for NBC. During this tour, she became the first woman to conduct the Boston Symphony Orchestra. In her three months there, she gave over a hundred lecture-recitals, recitals and concerts[47] These included the world premiere of Stravinsky's Dumbarton Oaks Concerto.[12]

HMV issued two additional Boulanger records in 1938: the Piano Concerto in D by Jean Françaix, which she conducted; and the Brahms Liebeslieder Waltzes, in which she and Dinu Lipatti were the duo pianists with a vocal ensemble, and (again with Lipatti) a selection of the Brahms Waltzes, Op. 39 for piano four hands.[48]

During Boulanger's tour of America the following year, she became the first woman to conduct the New York Philharmonic Orchestra at Carnegie Hall, the Philadelphia Orchestra and the Washington National Symphony Orchestra. She gave 102 lectures in 118 days across the US.[49]

Second World War and emigration

As the Second World War loomed, Boulanger helped her students leave France. She made plans to do so herself. Stravinsky joined her at Gargenville, where they awaited news of the German attack against France.[50] Waiting to leave France till the last moment before the invasion and occupation, Boulanger arrived in New York (via Madrid and Lisbon) on 6 November 1940.[51] After her arrival, Boulanger traveled to the Longy School of Music in Cambridge to give classes in harmony, fugue, counterpoint and advanced composition.[52] In 1942, she also began teaching at the Peabody Conservatory in Baltimore. Her classes included music history, harmony, counterpoint, fugue, orchestration and composition.[53]

Later life

Leaving America at the end of 1945, she returned to France in January 1946. There she accepted a position of professor of accompagnement au piano at the Paris Conservatoire.[54] In 1953, she was appointed overall director of the Fontainebleau School.[55] She also continued her touring to other countries.

As a long-standing friend of the family (and officially as chapel-master to the Prince of Monaco), Boulanger was asked to organise the music for the wedding of Prince Rainier of Monaco and the American actress, Grace Kelly, in 1956.[56] In 1958, she returned to the US for a six-week tour. She combined broadcasting, lecturing, and making four television films.[57]

Also in 1958, she was inducted as an Honorary Member into Sigma Alpha Iota, the international women's music fraternity, by the Gamma Delta chapter at the Crane School of Music in Potsdam, New York.[58]

In 1962, she toured Turkey, where she conducted concerts with her young protégée Idil Biret.[59] Later that year, she was invited to the White House of the United States by President John F. Kennedy and his wife Jacqueline,[60] and in 1966, she was invited to Moscow to jury for the International Tchaikovsky Competition, chaired by Emil Gilels.[61] While in England, she taught at the Yehudi Menuhin School. She also gave lectures at the Royal College of Music and the Royal Academy of Music, all of which were broadcast by the BBC.[61]

Her eyesight and hearing began to fade toward the end of her life.[12] On August 13, 1977, in advance of her 90th birthday, she was given a surprise birthday celebration at Fontainebleau's English Garden. The school's chef had prepared a large cake, on which was inscribed: "1887Happy Birthday to you, Nadia BoulangerFontainebleau, 1977". When the cake was served, 90 small white candles floating on the pond illuminated the area. Boulanger's then-protégé, Emile Naoumoff, performed a piece he had composed for the occasion.[62][63] Boulanger worked almost until her death in 1979 in Paris.[12] She is buried at the Montmartre Cemetery, as is her sister Lili.

Nadia Boulanger as pedagogue

See also: List of students of Nadia Boulanger

Asked about the difference between a well-made work and a masterpiece, Boulanger replied,

I can tell whether a piece is well-made or not, and I believe that there are conditions without which masterpieces cannot be achieved, but I also believe that what defines a masterpiece cannot be pinned down. I won't say that the criterion for a masterpiece does not exist, but I don't know what it is.[64]
She claimed to enjoy all "good music". According to Lennox Berkeley, "A good waltz has just as much value to her as a good fugue, and this is because she judges a work solely on its aesthetic content."[65] However, her taste has also been described as, "to put it mildly, eclectic": "She was an admirer of Debussy, a disciple of Ravel. Although she bore little sympathy for Schoenberg and the Viennese dodecaphonicians, she was an ardent champion of Stravinsky".[63]

She insisted on complete attention at all times: "Anyone who acts without paying attention to what he is doing is wasting his life. I'd go so far as to say that life is denied by lack of attention, whether it be to cleaning windows or trying to write a masterpiece."[66]

In 1920, two of her favourite female students left her to marry. She thought they had betrayed their work with her and their obligation to music. Her attitude to women in music was contradictory: despite Lili's success and her own eminence as a teacher, she held throughout her life that a woman's duty was to be a wife and mother[67] According to Ned Rorem, she would "always give the benefit of the doubt to her male students while overtaxing the females".[68] She saw teaching as a pleasure, a privilege and a duty:[69] "No-one is obliged to give lessons. It poisons your life if you give lessons and it bores you."[70]

Boulanger accepted pupils from any background; her only criterion was that they had to want to learn. She treated students differently depending on their ability: her talented students were expected to answer the most rigorous questions and perform well under stress. The less able students, who did not intend to follow a career in music, were treated more leniently.[71] Each student had to be approached differently: "When you accept a new pupil, the first thing is to try to understand what natural gift, what intuitive talent he has. Each individual poses a particular problem."[72] "It does not matter what style you use, as long as you use it consistently."[73] Boulanger used a variety of teaching methods, including traditional harmony, score reading at the piano, species counterpoint, analysis, and sight-singing (using fixed-Do solfège).[73]

When she first looked at a student's score, she often commented on its relation to the work of a variety of composers: "[T]hese measures have the same harmonic progressions as Bach's F major prelude and Chopin's F major Ballade. Can you not come up with something more interesting?"[74] Virgil Thomson found this process frustrating: "Anyone who allowed her in any piece to tell him what to do next would see that piece ruined before his eyes by the application of routine recipes and bromides from standard repertory."[68] Copland recalled that "she had but one all-embracing principle...the creation of what she called la grande ligne - the long line in music."[75] She disapproved of innovation for innovation's sake: "When you are writing music of your own, never strain to avoid the obvious."[76] She said, "You need an established language and then, within that established language, the liberty to be yourself. It's always necessary to be yourself that is a mark of genius in itself."[77]

She always claimed that she could not bestow creativity onto her students and that she could only help them to become intelligent musicians who understood the craft of composition. "I can't provide anyone with inventiveness, nor can I take it away; I can simply provide the liberty to read, to listen, to see, to understand."[78] Only inspiration could make the difference between a well-made piece and an artistic one.[79] She believed that the desire to learn, to become better, was all that was required to achieve always provided the right amount of work was put in. She would quote the examples of Rameau (who wrote his first opera at fifty), Wojtowicz (who became a concert pianist at thirty-one), and Roussel (who had no professional access to music till he was twenty-five), as counter-arguments to the idea that great artists always develop out of gifted children.[80]

Her memory was prodigious: by the time she was twelve, she knew the whole of Bach's Well-Tempered Clavier by heart.[81] Students have described her as having every significant piece, by every significant composer, at her fingertips.[74][82] Copland recalls,

Nadia Boulanger knew everything there was to know about music; she knew the oldest and the latest music, pre-Bach and post-Stravinsky. All technical know-how was at her fingertips: harmonic transposition, the figured bass, score reading, organ registration, instrumental techniques, structural analyses, the school fugue and the free fugue, the Greek modes and Gregorian chant.[75]

Murray Perahia recalled being "awed by the rhythm and character" with which she played a line of a Bach fugue.[83] Janet Craxton recalled listening to Boulanger's playing Bach chorales on the piano as "the single greatest musical experience of my life".[84]

Honours and awards

  • 1932 Chevalier to the Légion d'honneur
  • 1934 Order of Polonia Restituta
  • 1962 Howland Memorial Prize
  • 1975 Médaille d'Or of the Académie des Beaux-Arts of the Institut de France
  • 1977 Grand officier to the Légion d'honneur
  • 1977 Order of the British Empire
  • Order of St. Charles of Monaco
  • Order of the Crown of Belgium

Key works

Vocal[12]
  • Allons voir sur le lac d'argent (A. Silvestre), 2 voices, piano, 1905
  • Ecoutez la chanson bien douce (Verlaine), 1 voice, orchestra, 1905
  • Les sirènes (Grandmougin), female chorus, orchestra, 1905
  • A l'aube (Silvestre), chorus, orchestra, 1906
  • A l'hirondelle (Sully Prudhomme), chorus, orchestra, 1908
  • La sirène (E. Adenis/Desveaux), 3 voices, orchestra, 1908
  • Dnégouchka (G. Delaquys), 3 voices, orchestra, 1909
  • Over 30 songs for 1 voice, piano, incl.:
Extase (Hugo), 1901
Désepérance (Verlaine), 1902
Cantique de soeur Béatrice (Maeterlinck), 1909
Une douceur splendide et sombre (A. Samain), 1909
Larme solitaire (Heine), 1909
Une aube affaiblie (Verlaine), 1909
Prière (Bataille), 1909
Soir d'hiver (N. Boulanger), 1915
Au bord de la nuit, Chanson, Le couteau, Doute, L'échange (Mauclair), 1922
J'ai frappé (R. de Marquein), 1922
Chamber and solo works[12]
  • 3 pièces, organ, 1911, arr. cello, piano
  • 3 pièces, piano, 1914
  • Pièce sur des airs populaires flamands, organ, 1917
  • Vers la vie nouvelle, piano, 1917
Orchestral[12]
  • Allegro, 1905
  • Fantaisie variée, piano, orchestra, 1912
With Raoul Pugno[12]
  • Les heures claires (Verhaeren), 8 songs, 1 voice, piano, 1909
  • La ville morte (d'Annunzio), opera, 191013

Recordings

  • Tribute to Nadia Boulanger, Cascavelle VEL 3081 (2004)
  • BBC Legends: Nadia Boulanger, BBCL 40262 (1999)
  • Women of Note. Koch International Classics B000001SKH (1997)
  • Chamber Music by French Female Composers. Classic Talent B000002K49 (2000)
  • Le Baroque Avant Le Baroque. EMI Classics France B000CS43RG (2006)

Notes

  1. Lennox Berkeley, Sir, Peter Dickinson, Lennox Berkeley and Friends: Writings, Letters and Interviews, page 45
  2. Rosenstiel 1982, pp. 1013
  3. Rosenstiel 1982, pp. 1316
  4. Rosenstiel 1982, pp. 17,21
  5. Monsaingeon 1985, p. 20
  6. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 26
  7. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 29
  8. Rosenstiel 1982, pp. 3536
  9. Rosenstiel 1982, pp. 3839
  10. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 42
  11. Rosenstiel 1982, pp. 4448
  12. 12.00 12.01 12.02 12.03 12.04 12.05 12.06 12.07 12.08 12.09 12.10 12.11 12.12 12.13 {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}
  13. 13.0 13.1 Monsaingeon 1985, p. 26
  14. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 162
  15. Rosenstiel 1982, pp. 5863
  16. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 64
  17. Rosenstiel 1982, pp. 6569
  18. Rosenstiel 1982, pp. 74
  19. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 83
  20. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 84
  21. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 89
  22. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 90
  23. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 97
  24. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 128
  25. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 145
  26. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 146
  27. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 150
  28. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 152
  29. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 153
  30. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 157
  31. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 161
  32. Monsaingeon 1985, pp. 2425
  33. Rosenstiel 1982, pp. 178179
  34. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 189
  35. 35.0 35.1 Rosenstiel 1982, p. 202
  36. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 216
  37. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 249
  38. Monsaingeon 1985, p. 3
  39. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 256
  40. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 264
  41. Rosenstiel 1982, pp. 266268
  42. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 271
  43. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 279
  44. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 282
  45. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 283
  46. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 285
  47. Rosenstiel 1982, pp. 289294
  48. {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}
  49. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 303
  50. Rosenstiel 1982, pp. 312313
  51. Rosenstiel 1982, pp. 315316
  52. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 316
  53. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 323
  54. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 336
  55. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 349
  56. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 366
  57. Rosenstiel 1982, pp. 377378
  58. {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}
  59. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 386
  60. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 389
  61. 61.0 61.1 Doyle, Roger O. (2003). Martha Furman Schleifer Women Composers, p. 7534, Hall.
  62. Rosenstiel, Léonie (1998). Nadia Boulanger: A life in music, Norton.
  63. 63.0 63.1 Bernheimer, Martin, Mademoiselle: Conversations with Nadia Boulanger, by Bruno Monsaingeon, Los Angeles Times, September 8, 1985. URL accessed on May 12, 2013.
  64. Monsaingeon 1985, p. 33
  65. Berkeley, Lennox (January 1931). "Nadia Boulanger as Teacher".
  66. Monsaingeon 1985, p. 35
  67. Rosenstiel 1982, pp. 149,352,356
  68. 68.0 68.1 Rorem, Ned, The Composer and the Music Teacher, New York Times, 23 May 1982. URL accessed on 21 February 2012.
  69. Monsaingeon 1985, pp. 3132
  70. Monsaingeon 1985, p. 41
  71. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 193
  72. Monsaingeon 1985, pp. 5556
  73. 73.0 73.1 Monsaingeon 1985, p. 120
  74. 74.0 74.1 {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}
  75. 75.0 75.1 Copland, Aaron (1963). On Music, p. 7077, New York: Pyramid.
  76. Orr, Robin (March 1983). "Boulanger".
  77. Driver, Paul: "Mademoiselle", Tempo, June 1986, Cambridge University Press, pp. 3334
  78. Monsaingeon 1985, p. 54
  79. Rosenstiel 1982, p. 195
  80. Monsaingeon 1985, p. 42
  81. Monsaingeon 1985, p. 43
  82. {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}
  83. Monsaingeon 1985, p. 129
  84. {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}

References

  • Monsaingeon, Bruno (1985). Mademoiselle: Conversations with Nadia Boulanger, Carcanet Press.
  • Rosenstiel, Léonie (1982). Nadia Boulanger: A Life in Music, W.W. Norton & Co..

External links

  • www.nadiaboulanger.org
  • The American Conservatory at Fontainebleau
  • {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}

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