Michel-Dimitri Calvocoressi

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Michel-Dimitri Calvocoressi (2 October 1877 – 1 February 1944) was a French-born music critic and musicologist of Greek descent who was a British citizen and resident in England from 1914 onwards.Template:Sfn He is especially noted for his writings on Russian classical music, particularly on the life and works of Modest Mussorgsky, and his close association with the French musical establishment.

Born in Marseille, Calvocoressi learned numerous languages in his youth and attempted various careers before settling on music criticism. His early career was spent as an influential music critic in Paris, where he contributed to English and French newspapers: Gil Blas, the Comoedia Illustré, The Morning Post and The Musical Times, among others. He was well acquainted with the city's musical figures, particularly Maurice Ravel. Alongside Ravel and the pianist Ricardo Viñes, Calvocoressi founded the Apaches musical society.

After serving as a cryptographer in England for World War I, he remained in London to continue criticism and musicological writing for the rest of his life. Although he wrote his later books in English and came to know English cultural figures such as Arnold Bennett and Ralph Vaughan Williams, his colleague Gerald Abraham remarked that "he never enjoyed the influence and authority in London that he had exercised in Paris".Template:Sfn In addition to his writings on Russian music and Mussorgsky, he wrote on the music of Liszt, Glinka, Schumann, Koechlin and Debussy.

Early life and education

Michel-Dimitri Calvocoressi was born in Marseille, France on 2 October 1877 to Greek parents.Template:Sfn In his earliest years he learned French, Greek, Italian, English and later German; he noted that "I read far more English books than French."Template:Sfn At the École Monge high school of Paris, he developed a lifelong interest in geology and mineralogy.Template:Sfn The musicologist Gerald Abraham notes that Calvocoressi had "a number of false starts at other careers: law, banking and stockbroking".Template:Sfn At first, he studied at the Lycée Janson de Sailly, Paris, but inspiration from an Orchestre Lamoureux concert of Richard Wagner's works galvanized his interest in music.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn

Alongside his piano lessons with Eugène Claveau, Calvocoressi frequented the Parisian concert scene, with works by Bach, Liszt, d'Indy, Wagner, and the Romantic Russian composers in particular leaving a lasting impression.Template:Sfn He began harmony study at the Conservatoire de Paris with Xavier Leroux, where he became friends with the composer Maurice Ravel;Template:Sfn Ravel later dedicated "Alborada del gracioso" from the piano suite Miroirs to Calvocoressi.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn Ravel also harmonized a set of Greek folk songs which Calvocoressi translated, known as Template:Ill, and may have inspired the composer's piano Sonatine.Template:Sfn Calvocoressi, Ravel and the pianist Ricardo Viñes founded the Apaches music society..Template:Sfn Other members were the composers Florent Schmitt, Maurice Delage and Paul Ladmirault, the poets Léon-Paul Fargue and Tristan Klingsor and the painter Paul Sordes.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Career and later life

File:Michel Dimitri Calvocoressi (1877-1944) by Lev Samoilovich Bakst (Leon Bakst) (Russian, 1866-1924).jpg
Michel-Dimitri Calvocoressi, 1909 (Léon Bakst)

Calvocoressi's music criticism career can be divided into two: a French (1902–1914) and English (1921–1944) period.Template:Sfn Described by Abraham as "a remarkable polyglot", Calvocoressi's career beginning in 1902 was as a music critic and correspondent for several English, American, German and Russian periodicals.Template:Sfn Encouraged by the novelist Binet-Valmer, the latter introduced him to Octave Maus, an editor of the monthly L'Art Moderne magazine.Template:Sfn Calvocoressi became the Paris musical correspondent for L'Art Moderne and music critic for Binet-Valmer's La Renaissance latine magazine; around then he also was music critic for the Anglo-French Weekly Critical Review.Template:Sfn Although some of these publications became obsolete in the next few years, Calvocoressi was well established enough to be unaffected.Template:Sfn He contributed to other publications and various time: the daily Gil Blas, the fortnightly Comoedia Illustré'' (part of Comœdia), the daily The Morning Post and particularly monthly Musical Times.Template:Sfn

Calvocoressi published his first book—a study on Franz Liszt—in 1905, the year when he began writing for the English Monthly Musical Record, began both a correspondence with the Russian composer Mily Balakirev and developed a general interest in Russian music, particularly the work of Modest Mussorgsky.Template:Sfn From 1907 to 1910 he served as an advisor for the impresario Sergei Diaghilev, who organized Russian music and ballet concerts in Paris.Template:Sfn For his efforts, the Russian government granted him the Order of Saint Anna, while the Soviets later elected him a member of the Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union.Template:Sfn He visited Russia for the first and only time in 1914, meeting with musical figures such as Alexander Glazunov.Template:Sfn Calvocoressi lectured at the École des Hautes Études Sociales from 1905 to 1914, teaching about contemporary music.Template:Sfn He also translated song texts, opera librettos and books from Russian and Hungarian into French and English.Template:Sfn His next books included studies on Mussorgsky (1908), Glinka (1911) and Schumann (1912).Template:Sfn

Calvocoressi paused music criticism at the onset of World War I in 1914, but found himself unable to serve the French due to his Greek ancestry.Template:Sfn Later that year he moved to London and served as a cryptographer.Template:Sfn He spent the rest of his life in England; he was naturalized and married Ethel Grey, a British citizen who was the dedicatee of many of his future books.Template:Sfn These later studies were all in English, and their subjects included Koechlin (1923), music criticism (1923), musical taste (1925), recollections of his musical experiences (1933), Debussy (1944) as well on two studies each on Russian music (1936 & 1944) and Mussorgsky specifically (1946 & 1956).Template:Sfn Although he continued music criticism in London from 1921 onwards, Abraham remarked that "he never enjoyed the influence and authority in London that he had exercised in Paris".Template:Sfn Calvocoressi became well acquainted with "many distinguished Englishmen", including the author Arnold Bennett and the composer Ralph Vaughan Williams.Template:Sfn He died in London on 1 February 1944.Template:Sfn

Selected writings

Books

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Articles

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References

Notes

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Citations

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Sources

Books

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Articles

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Further reading

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External links

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