Jongen, Joseph

Jongen, Joseph

Symphonie Concertante for organ and orchestra, Op.81

SKU: 4996 Category: Tag:

34,00 

Preface

Jongen, Joseph – Symphonie Concertante for organ and orchestra, Op.81

b Liège, 14 Dec 1873; d Sart-lez-Spa, 12 Jul 1953

 

Allegro, molto moderato (In modo dorian) p.3
Divertimento: Molto vivo p.37
Molto Lento: Lento misterioso p.61
Toccata (Moto perpetuo): Allegro moderato p.84

Preface
Marie Alphonse Nicolas Joseph Jongen was born in Liège, Belgium, in 1873. Showing musical gifts at an early age, he enrolled at the Liège Conservatory where he studied piano with Jules Ghymers, harmony with Sylvain Dupuis, organ with Charles-Marie Danneels, and fugue and composition with Jean-Theodore Radoux. When he left Belgium in 1898 for a four-year travel to important musical centres in Italy, Germany, and France, he was already a successful composer who had won the first prize of the Royal Academy of Belgium for String Quartet op.3 in 1894 and the prestigious Prix de Rome for the cantata Comala op.14 in 1897.

After working as an organist and professor of harmony in Liège, at the outbreak of World War I in 1914 Jongen moved with his family to the United Kingdom. Staying there throughout the war, he was active with the piano quartet he founded and he also gave organ recitals. Back in Belgium, he took up the post of professor of fugue at the Royal Conservatory of Brussels in 1920, and from 1919 to 1926 he conducted the ‘Concerts spirituels’ in Brussels, during which audiences were introduced to numerous important new works. In 1925 he became director of the Royal Conservatory of Brussels, being succeeded in 1939 by his brother Léon Jongen (1884-1969), who was also a composer. Joseph Jongen was a member of the Académie royale de Belgique and a corresponding member of the Institut de France….

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Score Data

Score Number

4996

Edition

Repertoire Explorer

Genre

Solo Instrument(s) & Orchestra

Pages

141

Size

210 x 297 mm

Printing

Reprint

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