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Eugène Bozza
1905 - 1991
France
Picture
E. Bozza
Eugène Bozza (04/04/1905 - 28/09/1991), a French composer (born in Nice) who was most famous for chamber music for winds. Among his most famous works include En Forêt for horn and piano and his work for saxophone. He was a brilliant student at the Paris Conservatoire, winning First Prizes for the violin (1924), conducting (1930), composition (1934), as well as the Grand Prix de Rome. He conducted the orchestra of the Opera-Comique until 1948; he then became Head of the Conservatoire in Valenciennes. His works include several operas, ballets, large-scale symphonic and choral works. But his worldwide reputation is derived mainly for his many chamber works, written for various instrumental formations with a preference for wind instruments. Bozza's works reveal melodic fluency, elgance of structure and a consistently sensitive concern for instrumental capabilities.
Source:The new Grove dictionary of music and musicians
Requiem
Period:Modernism
Composed in:1950
Musical form:mass
Text/libretto:Latin mass
This Requiem, written in 1950, is for three voices (soprano, tenor, bass).
Source:The new Grove dictionary of music and musicians
Contributor:Tassos Dimitriadis
Messe de requiem
Period:Modernism
Composed in:1971
Musical form:mass
Text/libretto:Latin mass
This Messe de requiem, written in 1971, is for chorus and orchestra.
Source:The new Grove dictionary of music and musicians
Contributor:Tassos Dimitriadis