BBC Music Magazine

To be Franck

Franck is something of a Marmite composer. I have musical friends who can’t stand his music at any price. But for those of us who admire his memorable melodies, his orchestral colours, his wonderful control of long passages and his unmistakably personal voice, he is a composer to treasure.

Three periods

Ever since Beethoven’s life and works were divided into three periods, it has been standard to do the same with other composers, often unthinkingly. But with Franck it’s entirely accurate. The first period, from his birth in 1822 to 1846, covers his youth and subservience to his father Nicolas-Joseph, during which it’s no overstatement to say that he couldn’t call his life his own – driven as he was to be a barnstorming pianist who brought home the money and who could turn his hand to writing flashy music for the instrument.

The second period, from 1846 to around 1872, saw him leaving home, marrying, settling down as a choirmaster and organist, and exploring the possibilities of writing operas as well as church music. It also saw the beginning of his friendship with Liszt. The final period, from around 1872 until his death in 1890, embraces most of the music by which he is now remembered, and the formation of ‘la bande à Franck’, the group of his pupils that included d’Indy, Duparc and Chausson, as well as Pierre de Bréville and Alexis de

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from BBC Music Magazine

BBC Music Magazine1 min readMusic
Welcome
We were excited to get our hands on the world-premiere recording of Fausto, Louise Bertin’s 1831 operatic retelling of the Faust story. Given just three performances in the year of its composition, the work then vanished for nearly two centuries! Now
BBC Music Magazine6 min read
Mark Elder
It’s the end of an era in Manchester. And at the centre of their last season together – the 24th year of one of the most successful and long-running partnerships in British orchestral history – conductor Sir Mark Elder and the Hallé are playing one o
BBC Music Magazine1 min read
Bonang Goes Pythagoras’s Theory Of Numerical Harmony
Did Pythagoras get it wrong? In the 6th century BC, the great polymath showed that certain numerical ratios between sounds are what makes music sound pleasant to us – and dissonance occurs when there’s a deviation from such ratios. But scientists in

Related