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{{Short description|Belgian musician (1870–1946)}}
[[File:Juliette Folville, pianiste et compositeur.jpg|thumb|Juliette Folville]]
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2021}}
{{Infobox musical artist
| image =
| caption =
| name = Eugénie-Emilie Juliette Folville
| background = non_vocal_instrumentalist
| birth_date = {{birth date |1870|01|05}}
| birth_place = [[Liège]], [[Belgium]]
| death_date = {{death date and age |1946|10|28|1870|01|05|df=y}}
| death_place =
| occupation = Pianist, Violinist, Composer
| instrument =
| genre =
}}


'''Eugénie-Emilie Juliette Folville''' (b. 5 January 1870, d. 19 or 28 October 1946) was a [[Belgian]] pianist, violinist, music educator, conductor and composer.
'''Eugénie-Emilie Juliette Folville''' (5 January 1870 28 October 1946) was a [[Belgians|Belgian]] pianist, violinist, music educator, conductor and composer.


==Life==
== Life ==
Eugénie-Emilie Juliette Folville was born in [[Liège|Liege]], [[Belgium]], and began the study of music with her father who was a lawyer and amateur musician. She studied violin with [[Charles Malherbe]], [[Ovide Musin]] and [[César Thomson]] and made her debut in Liege in 1879. She had a successful career on the concert stage, and in 1897 took a position teaching piano at the Liege Conservatory.
Eugénie-Emilie Juliette Folville was born in [[Liège]], [[Belgium]], and began the study of music with her father who was a lawyer and amateur musician. She studied violin with [[Charles Malherbe]], [[Ovide Musin]] and [[César Thomson]] and made her debut in Liège in 1879. She had a successful career on the concert stage, and in 1897 took a position teaching piano at the [[Royal Conservatory of Liège]].


She lived for several years in London, and during World War II she lived and performed in Bournemouth.<ref>{{citation |url=http://www.sophie-drinker-institut.de/index.php?page=folville-juliette|title=Folville , Juliette (Eugenie Emilie)|publisher=Sophie Drinker Institute|accessdate=8 May 2014}}</ref> Her place of death is uncertain, but thought to be [[Castres]] or [[Dourgne]], on 19 or 28 October 1946.<ref>{{cite book |url=http://books.google.com/?id=IvoQQU1QL_QC&pg=PA172&dq=Eug%C3%A9nie-Emilie+Juliette+Folville+(1870%E2%80%931946)#v=onepage&q&f=false|title=The Norton/Grove dictionary of women composers|format=Digitized online by GoogleBooks|first=Julie Anne|last=Sadie|first2=Rhian|last2=Samuel|year=1994|accessdate=10 December 2010|isbn=9780393034875}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=The American history and encyclopedia of music|first=William Lines|last2=Hubbard|first2=George W.|last2=Andrews|first3=Edward|last3=Dickinson|year=1908}}</ref>
She lived for several years in London, and during World War II she lived and performed in Bournemouth.<ref>{{citation |url=http://www.sophie-drinker-institut.de/index.php?page=folville-juliette|title=Folville , Juliette (Eugenie Emilie)|publisher=Sophie Drinker Institute|accessdate=8 May 2014}}</ref> She died in [[Dourgne]] on 28 October 1946.<ref>« Folville, Juliette, Eugénie, Émilie », death certificat, n°24/1946, Tarn Department, commune of Dourgne.</ref>


==Works==
== Works ==
Folville composed for theater, solo instruments, orchestra, chorus, and chamber ensemble. Selected works include:
Folville composed for theater, solo instruments, orchestra, chorus, and chamber ensemble. Selected works include:
===Orchestral works===
*''Scènes champêtres'' for orchestra (1st Suite for orchestra) (1885) : Aux Champs, Dans la montagne, Rêverie, Fête de village<ref name=femmes>{{citation |url=http://books.google.com/?id=fIPj8NRvuNAC&pg=PA250&lpg=PA250&dq=Juliette+Folville#v=onepage&q=Juliette%20Folville&f=false|title=Dictionnaire des femmes belges: XIXe et XXe siècles|isbn=9782873864347|date=2006-01-01}}</ref>
*''Scènes d'hiver'' for orchestra (2nd Suite for orchestra)
*''Scènes de la mer'' for orchestra (3rd Suite for orchestra)
*''Oceano Nox'', symphonic poem
*Symphony (incomplete ?)<ref name=grande>{{citation |url=http://grandemusica.net/musical-biographies-f/folville-juliette|title=Folville, Juliette}}</ref>
*Violin Concerto (Concertstück for violin and orchestra)
*Piano Concerto in D minor<ref name=musicologie>{{citation |url=http://www.musicologie.org/Biographies/f/folvile_juliette.html|title=Folvile, Juliette}}</ref>
*''Triptych'' for cello and orchestra
*''Concertstuck pour Violoncelle'' (Concert piece for cello) and orchestra (1905)<ref>{{citation |url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_compositions_for_cello_and_orchestra#F|title=List of compositions}}</ref>
*Incidental Music for « Jean de Chimay » (1905)


===Chamber and Piano Works===
=== Orchestral works ===
*''2 Sonatinas'' for piano (1881-82)
*''Berceuse'' for violin and piano (1884)
*''En Ardenne'', sketches for piano<ref name=musicologie></ref>
*Piano Quartet<ref name=femmes></ref>
*''Suite Poetique'' for violin
*Violin Sonata<ref name=grande></ref>
*''Mazurka'' for violin and piano
*''Triptych'' for violin and piano (manuscript. Bruxelles, Bibliothèque du Conservatoire)
*''Concertstück'' for cello and piano (and for two pianos)
*''Communion'' for organ<ref>{{citation |url=http://spellerweb.net/poindex/organmusic/FolvilleCommunion.html|title=Juliette Folville, Communion}}</ref>


* ''Scènes champêtres''. ''<abbr>1<sup>re</sup></abbr> Suite d'orchestre'', op. 9 (1885) : Aux Champs, Dans la montagne, Rêverie, Fête de village
===Choral and Vocal Works===
* ''Scènes de la mer''. ''<abbr>2<sup>e</sup></abbr> Suite d'orchestre'', op. 14 (1886) : Chanson du pêcheur, Nuit étoilée, Mer phosphorescente, Flots agités, Adieux à l'océan
*''Chants printaniers'' (1883-84)
* ''Scènes d'hiver''. ''<abbr>3<sup>e</sup></abbr> Suite d'orchestre'', op. 17 (1887) : Ballade, La neige, Noël, Carnaval
*''Attala'' (1892) opera, libretto by [[Paul Collin]]
* Violin concerto in G Minor, op. 20 (1888)
*''Eva'', drama for soprano, choir and piano
* Piano concerto in D Minor (1902–1903)
*''La Noce au Village'', cantata
* ''Concerstück'' for cello and orchestra (1905)
* ''Impressions d'Ardenne'', orchestral suite (1910)
* ''Triptyque'' for violin and orchestra, or piano (ca. 1935)


=== Chamber and piano works ===
==References==

{{reflist}}
* ''Souvenir de Mozart. <abbr>1<sup>re</sup></abbr> Sonatine'' (op. 7, 1881) and ''<abbr>2<sup>e</sup></abbr> Sonatine'' (op. 11, 1882)
* ''Berceuse'' for violin and piano, op. 24 (1890)
* ''En Ardenne''. ''Esquisses pour piano'' (ca. 1910)
* ''<abbr>1<sup>er</sup></abbr> Quatuor pour piano'', op. 9 (1885)
* ''Berceuse'' for cello and quartet accompaniment [s.d.]
* ''Poème'' for cello and piano, or orchestra (ca.1908-1909)
* ''Mazurka'' for violin and piano (1910)
* ''Communion'' for organ (1912)
* ''Verset sur le thème du «Tantum», 6e ton'' for organ (1912)

=== Choral and vocal works ===
*''Chants printaniers'' (1883–84)
*''Atala''. ''Drame lyrique en deux actes'' (1891), libretto by [[Paul Collin]]. Creation at the Grand Théâtre de Lille on 3 March 1892.
*''Ewa. Légende Norwégienne'', cantate pour soli, chœurs et accompagnement d'orchestre (ca. 1889), poem by Paul Collin.
*''Noce au Village'', op. 13 (1886), for solo, choir and orchestra, words by Paul Collin.
*''Jean de Chimay''. ''Drame lyrique en quatre actes'', libretto by Alfred Billet, unfinished.

== References ==
{{Reflist}}

== Further reading ==

* Fauve BOUGARD, ''"Le morceau sera signé J. Folville". Juliette Folville (1870–1946). Compositrice et interprète. Itinéraire d'une femme dans la Belgique musicale''. Master thesis in musicology, Université libre de Bruxelles (Belgium), dir. Valérie Dufour, 2018.

== External links ==
* {{IMSLP|Folville, Juliette}}
* [https://andrewpink.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/e-e-j-folville-verset-tantum.mp3 ''Verset sur le thème du «Tantum», 6e ton for organ''] played by Andrew Pink<ref>[https://andrewpink.org/exordia/ ''Exordia ad Missam: my lcckdown recordings'']. Online resource, accessed 21 July 2022.</ref>

{{Authority control}}


{{Authority control|VIAF=196355808}}
{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
| NAME = Folville, Eugine Emilie Juliette
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = Composer
| DATE OF BIRTH = 5 January 1870
| PLACE OF BIRTH = [[Liège|Liege]], [[Belgium]]
| DATE OF DEATH = October 1946
| PLACE OF DEATH =
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Folville, Eugine Emilie Juliette}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Folville, Eugine Emilie Juliette}}
[[Category:1870 births]]
[[Category:1870 births]]
[[Category:1946 deaths]]
[[Category:1946 deaths]]
[[Category:20th-century Belgian composers]]
[[Category:20th-century Belgian pianists]]
[[Category:20th-century classical composers]]
[[Category:20th-century classical composers]]
[[Category:Belgian music educators]]
[[Category:Belgian music educators]]
[[Category:Women classical composers]]
[[Category:Belgian women classical composers]]
[[Category:Belgian composers]]
[[Category:Belgian classical composers]]
[[Category:Opera composers]]
[[Category:Belgian opera composers]]
[[Category:People from Liège]]
[[Category:Musicians from Liège]]
[[Category:Belgian women violinists]]
[[Category:Belgian women pianists]]
[[Category:Women classical violinists]]
[[Category:Women classical pianists]]
[[Category:Women opera composers]]
[[Category:Belgian women music educators]]
[[Category:20th-century women composers]]
[[Category:20th-century women pianists]]



{{Belgium-composer-stub}}
{{Belgium-composer-stub}}

Latest revision as of 20:54, 6 March 2024

Eugénie-Emilie Juliette Folville
Born(1870-01-05)January 5, 1870
Liège, Belgium
Died28 October 1946(1946-10-28) (aged 76)
Occupation(s)Pianist, Violinist, Composer

Eugénie-Emilie Juliette Folville (5 January 1870 – 28 October 1946) was a Belgian pianist, violinist, music educator, conductor and composer.

Life[edit]

Eugénie-Emilie Juliette Folville was born in Liège, Belgium, and began the study of music with her father who was a lawyer and amateur musician. She studied violin with Charles Malherbe, Ovide Musin and César Thomson and made her debut in Liège in 1879. She had a successful career on the concert stage, and in 1897 took a position teaching piano at the Royal Conservatory of Liège.

She lived for several years in London, and during World War II she lived and performed in Bournemouth.[1] She died in Dourgne on 28 October 1946.[2]

Works[edit]

Folville composed for theater, solo instruments, orchestra, chorus, and chamber ensemble. Selected works include:

Orchestral works[edit]

  • Scènes champêtres. 1re Suite d'orchestre, op. 9 (1885) : Aux Champs, Dans la montagne, Rêverie, Fête de village
  • Scènes de la mer. 2e Suite d'orchestre, op. 14 (1886) : Chanson du pêcheur, Nuit étoilée, Mer phosphorescente, Flots agités, Adieux à l'océan
  • Scènes d'hiver. 3e Suite d'orchestre, op. 17 (1887) : Ballade, La neige, Noël, Carnaval
  • Violin concerto in G Minor, op. 20 (1888)
  • Piano concerto in D Minor (1902–1903)
  • Concerstück for cello and orchestra (1905)
  • Impressions d'Ardenne, orchestral suite (1910)
  • Triptyque for violin and orchestra, or piano (ca. 1935)

Chamber and piano works[edit]

  • Souvenir de Mozart. 1re Sonatine (op. 7, 1881) and 2e Sonatine (op. 11, 1882)
  • Berceuse for violin and piano, op. 24 (1890)
  • En Ardenne. Esquisses pour piano (ca. 1910)
  • 1er Quatuor pour piano, op. 9 (1885)
  • Berceuse for cello and quartet accompaniment [s.d.]
  • Poème for cello and piano, or orchestra (ca.1908-1909)
  • Mazurka for violin and piano (1910)
  • Communion for organ (1912)
  • Verset sur le thème du «Tantum», 6e ton for organ (1912)

Choral and vocal works[edit]

  • Chants printaniers (1883–84)
  • Atala. Drame lyrique en deux actes (1891), libretto by Paul Collin. Creation at the Grand Théâtre de Lille on 3 March 1892.
  • Ewa. Légende Norwégienne, cantate pour soli, chœurs et accompagnement d'orchestre (ca. 1889), poem by Paul Collin.
  • Noce au Village, op. 13 (1886), for solo, choir and orchestra, words by Paul Collin.
  • Jean de Chimay. Drame lyrique en quatre actes, libretto by Alfred Billet, unfinished.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Folville , Juliette (Eugenie Emilie), Sophie Drinker Institute, retrieved 8 May 2014
  2. ^ « Folville, Juliette, Eugénie, Émilie », death certificat, n°24/1946, Tarn Department, commune of Dourgne.

Further reading[edit]

  • Fauve BOUGARD, "Le morceau sera signé J. Folville". Juliette Folville (1870–1946). Compositrice et interprète. Itinéraire d'une femme dans la Belgique musicale. Master thesis in musicology, Université libre de Bruxelles (Belgium), dir. Valérie Dufour, 2018.

External links[edit]


  1. ^ Exordia ad Missam: my lcckdown recordings. Online resource, accessed 21 July 2022.