Aristide Hignard
![](../I/m/Aristide_Hignard_1880.jpg)
Aristide Hignard
Jean-Louis Aristide Hignard (Nantes 20 May 1822 - Vernon 20 March 1898), was a French composer of light opera notable as a friend of Jules Verne, also from Nantes and six years Hignard's junior, some of whose librettos and verse he set to music.[1]
Works
- 1850 : La Mille et deuxième nuit, libretto Jules Verne, never performed
- 1851 : Le Visionnaire, opéra-comique in 1 act
- 1853 : Le Colin-maillard, opéra-comique in 1 act, libretto by Jules Verne and Michel Carré
- 1855 : Les Compagnons de la Marjolaine, opéra-comique in 1 act, libretto by Jules Verne and Michel Carré
- 1858 : Monsieur de Chimpanzé, operetta, libretto by Jules Verne
- 1860 : L'Auberge des Ardennes, opéra-comique in 1 act, libretto by Jules Verne and Michel Carré
- 1860 : Le Nouveau Pourceaugnac, played at the Bouffes-Parisiens
- 1861 : Les Musiciens de l'orchestre, a collaboration with Léo Delibes
- 1868 : Hamlet, opéra
- 1857-1863 : Rimes et mélodies, on the poems of Jules Verne
Recordings
- Mélodies inédites. Music by Hignard and one song Zouaves! by Alfred Dufresne (1822-1872). L'Académie de Bretagne et des Pays de Loire. Françoise Masset, Emmanuel Strosser. 2005.
Bibliography
- Patrick Barbier, « Hignard et Verne: les mélodies de l'amitié » in Voyage autour de Jules Verne, Académie de Bretagne et des Pays de Loire, 2000
- Alexandre Tarrieu, « Aristide Hignard (1822-1898) » in Revue Jules Verne, n° 11, 2001
Notes and references
- ↑ Patrick Barbier, « Hignard et Verne: les mélodies de l'amitié » in Voyage autour de Jules Verne, Académie de Bretagne et des Pays de la Loire, 2000.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, December 27, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.