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Ambroise Thomas

Charles Louis Ambroise Thomas (French: [ɑ̃bʁwaz tɔmɑ]; 5 August 1811 – 12 February 1896) was a French composer and teacher, best known for his operas Mignon (1866) and Hamlet (1868).

Born into a musical family, Thomas was a student at the Conservatoire de Paris, winning France's top music prize, the Prix de Rome. He pursued a career as a composer of operas, completing his first opera, La double échelle, in 1837. He wrote twenty further operas over the next decades, mostly comic, but he also treated more serious subjects, finding considerable success with audiences in France and abroad.


Thomas was appointed as a professor at the Conservatoire in 1856, and in 1871 he succeeded Daniel Auber as director. Between then and his death at his home in Paris twenty-five years later, he modernised the Conservatoire's organisation while imposing a rigidly conservative curriculum, hostile to modern music, and attempting to prevent composers such as César Franck and Gabriel Fauré from influencing the students of the Conservatoire.


Thomas' operas were generally neglected during most of the 20th century, but in more recent decades they have experienced something of a revival both in Europe and the US.

List of compositions[edit]

Briscoe, James (2015). . Music from the Paris Conservatoire. Middleton: A-R Editions. ISBN 978-0-89579-814-5.

Contest pieces for trumpet or cornet and piano

(1879). A Dictionary of Music and Musicians, Volume 1. London: Macmillan. OCLC 906527163.

Grove, George

Grove, George (1889). A Dictionary of Music and Musicians, Volume 4. London: Macmillan.  906527163.

OCLC

Loewenberg, Alfred (1978) [1955]. Annals of opera, 1597–1940 (third ed.). London: John Calder.  978-0-7145-3657-6.

ISBN

; H Villiers Barnett (trans) (1919) [1910]. My Recollections. Boston: Small Maynard. OCLC 774419363.

Massenet, Jules

(1991). Gabriel Fauré – A Musical Life. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-7145-3657-6.

Nectoux, Jean-Michel

(2011). Ravel. New Haven, US and London: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-10882-8.

Nichols, Roger

(1991) [1975]. Ravel: Man and Musician. Mineola, US: Dover. ISBN 978-0-486-26633-6.

Orenstein, Arbie

(1982). Debussy and the Theatre. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-22807-7.

Orledge, Robert

; Alfred Dandelot (1911). Gounod: sa vie et ses oeuvres d'apres des documents inedits, Volume 2 (in French). Paris: Delagrave. OCLC 123185385.

Prod'homme, Jacques-Gabriel

(1996). The Harvard Biographical Dictionary of Music. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674372993. OCLC 1023745280.

Randel, Don

Reid, Charles (1961). Thomas Beecham: An Independent Biography. London: Victor Gollancz.  500565141.

OCLC

Sen, Suddhaseel (2013). "Shakespeare reception in France: the case of Ambroise Thomas' Hamlet". In Joseph M Ortiz (ed.). Shakespeare and the Culture of Romanticism. Farnham: Ashgate.  978-1-4094-5581-3.

ISBN

(1911). "Thomas, Charles Louis Ambroise" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 26 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 866.

Hervey, Arthur

Georges Masson, 1996. Ambroise Thomas (Metz: Editions Serpentoise)

at the International Music Score Library Project (IMSLP)

Free scores by Ambroise Thomas

Media related to Ambroise Thomas at Wikimedia Commons