X-Nico

6 unusual facts about École César Franck


Alain Gagnon

Those honours enabled him to pursue graduate studies in France at the École Normale de Musique de Paris with Henri Dutilleux and at the École César Franck with Olivier Alain in 1965-1966.

École César Franck

The students of Vincent d'Indy, dispossessed from the Schola, founded the Caesar Franck School, that opened its doors on January 7, 1935 under the direction of Louis de Serres, assisted by Guy de Lioncourt and Marcel Labey.

On 9 March it then re-installed itself at number 16, boulevard Edgar-Quinet and, from 1941, at number 3, rue Jules-Chaplain, in the 6th arrondissement of Paris (not far from the rue Stanislas where the first Schola had begun), and finally at number 8, rue Gît-le-Cœur, from 1968.

Les élèves de Vincent d’Indy, dépossédés de la Schola, fondèrent l’École César Franck qui ouvrit ses portes le 7 janvier 1935 sous la direction de Louis de Serres, assisté de Guy de Lioncourt et de Marcel Labey.

The École César-Franck (César Franck School, named after César Franck) was a music school founded in Paris in January 1935 by Guy de Lioncourt, Louis de Serres, Pierre de Bréville and Marcel Labey.

Jacques Berthier

Learning first from his parents, Berthier was trained in music at the César Franck School in Paris.



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