Lenepveu, Charles. (1840 - 1910). Scène et Duetto...Renaud dans les jardins d'Armide - SIGNED PRESENTATION COPY. Paris: J. Hielard. [Ca. 1875]. Upright folio. 8 pp. Lithographed [PN] 304. Front wrapper separated completely, small tape repairs lower edge and quite foxed, lacking rear wrapper, internally very good. SIGNED and inscribed on the front rapper upper left and dated 30 April, 1877.
The French composer and teacher won the Prix de Rome in 1867 and was a professor at the Conservatoire from 1880, where he was known as a strict conservative. Expected to succeed Théodore Dubois as director of the Conservatoire in 1905, he was at the centre of what became known as "l'affaire Ravel" when he was implicated in an attempt to rig the results of that year's Prix de Rome in favour of his own pupils, at Ravel's expense. Fauré was subsequently appointed to the position instead of Lenepveu
The French composer and teacher won the Prix de Rome in 1867 and was a professor at the Conservatoire from 1880, where he was known as a strict conservative. Expected to succeed Théodore Dubois as director of the Conservatoire in 1905, he was at the centre of what became known as "l'affaire Ravel" when he was implicated in an attempt to rig the results of that year's Prix de Rome in favour of his own pupils, at Ravel's expense. Fauré was subsequently appointed to the position instead of Lenepveu
Lenepveu, Charles. (1840 - 1910). Scène et Duetto...Renaud dans les jardins d'Armide - SIGNED PRESENTATION COPY. Paris: J. Hielard. [Ca. 1875]. Upright folio. 8 pp. Lithographed [PN] 304. Front wrapper separated completely, small tape repairs lower edge and quite foxed, lacking rear wrapper, internally very good. SIGNED and inscribed on the front rapper upper left and dated 30 April, 1877.
The French composer and teacher won the Prix de Rome in 1867 and was a professor at the Conservatoire from 1880, where he was known as a strict conservative. Expected to succeed Théodore Dubois as director of the Conservatoire in 1905, he was at the centre of what became known as "l'affaire Ravel" when he was implicated in an attempt to rig the results of that year's Prix de Rome in favour of his own pupils, at Ravel's expense. Fauré was subsequently appointed to the position instead of Lenepveu
The French composer and teacher won the Prix de Rome in 1867 and was a professor at the Conservatoire from 1880, where he was known as a strict conservative. Expected to succeed Théodore Dubois as director of the Conservatoire in 1905, he was at the centre of what became known as "l'affaire Ravel" when he was implicated in an attempt to rig the results of that year's Prix de Rome in favour of his own pupils, at Ravel's expense. Fauré was subsequently appointed to the position instead of Lenepveu