Henry Barraud

For the English artist, see Henry Barraud (artist).

Henry Barraud (sometimes Henri) (23 April 1900 28 December 1997) was a French composer.

He was born in Bordeaux. He was a student of Louis Aubert at the Conservatoire de Paris, but in 1927 failed to graduate, apparently because of his refusal to follow orthodox methods. Along with Pierre-Octave Ferroud and Jean Rivier, he helped to form the society Triton for the wider distribution of contemporary music.

After the Liberation of Paris in 1944, he was named the Director of Paris Radio, and later, in 1948, of what later became ORTF, a position he held until his retirement in 1965.

Works

As a composer, Barraud contributed to opera, ballet, orchestral music, chamber music, choral and vocal music.

OPERA

 Tragédie lyrique en 1 acte
 Livret de Salvador de Madariaga d´après Cervantes
 (UA 22.10.1980 Radio France Grand Auditorium)
 Conductor:Serge Baudo
 Interpretes:Taillon-Ringart-Barrial-Blanc-Dume-Massis-Hollander)

ORATORIO

  Based on a text by the French poet Charles Péguy

Paul Paray and the Detroit Symphony Orchestra recorded Barraud's orchestral work Offrande à une ombre in 1957 for Mercury Records. This wartime memorial, commemorating the death during combat of Maurice Jaubert at the age of 40, was initially released on LP in monophonic sound; the stereophonic version was issued on CD by Philips Records. A work listed as Symphony #1 for full orchestra (not just strings) was recorded on French Columbia FCX 597 (LP) performed by Georges Tzipine leading the ORTF. Its three movements are entitled Overture, Nocturne, and Interludes Dramatiques.

Instrumental works

Writings

References


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