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The Composer and the Impresario: Florent Schmitt and Felix Aprahamian

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A life full of music: Felix Aprahamian (1914-2005).

A life full of music: Felix Aprahamian (1914-2005).

Felix Aprahamian (1914-2005) is probably the closest thing to a renaissance man we’ve seen in the 20th Century — at least in the realm of music.

Born into an Armenian immigrant mercantile family in London in 1914, he spent his entire life in the service of music, despite having trained for a career in business.

In later years, Aprahamian would remark, “I failed matriculation because I discovered music.”

And he indulged those musical interests with a prodigious passion and flamboyance that left many people shaking their heads in disbelief.

Consider any aspect of organizing and promoting concerts … and it’s likely something Felix Aprahamian participated in during his long life.  He was concert director of the London Philharmonic Orchestra during the 1940s, and for nearly 40 years worked for United Music Publishers, which was the agent for the most important Parisian music publishing houses such as Durand, Mathot and Salabert.

Aprahamian also served as a music critic for the Sunday Times roughly contemporaneously with his tenure at UMP.  His music columns were popular with readers, and he was known for his literate (and humane) commentary.

He also contributed reviews of recordings to Gramophone magazine, and wrote program notes for concerts and recordings that were notable for their literacy and elegance.

Charles-Marie Widor, French organist and composer (1844-1937).

Charles-Marie Widor, French organist and composer (1844-1937).

A proficient organist himself although largely self-taught, Aprahamian became assistant secretary of the U.K.’s Organ Music Society at the tender age of 17.  His love for the organ is what took him to France in 1933, where he met the great French organist-composer Charles-Marie Widor, then in his late eighties.

It was also in France that Aprahamian met Frederick Delius at his home in Grez-sur-Loing, which resulted in a lifelong passion for Delius’ music.  Aprahamian was an advisor to the Delius Trust from 1961 onwards, and later served as president of the Society.

[Among his greatest satisfactions was learning that Delius' compositions had been selected for broadcast over the public address systems for British mass transit stations as a deterrent to vandals!]

But it’s safe to contend that French music was Aprahamian’s greatest passion of all — and it was in his role as a concert organizer and promoter that he would bring many new French works to British audiences starting in the late 1930s, extending through the war years and beyond.

In 1938, Aprahamian organized the first complete performance in England of Olivier Messiaen’s La Nativité du Seigneur, played by the composer himself.  It was the first of many such concerts he would put together for the edification of British audiences.

His prodigious knowledge of French music led Aprahamian to organize the Concerts de Musique Française for the Free French in London during the war years.  Begun in 1942, he would present 104 concerts in all, performed at venues such as Wigmore Hall.

The late John Amis, music editor for The Guardian newspaper and a long-time acquaintance of Felix Aprahamian, recounted the importance of these efforts in his tribute to the impresario published at the time of Aprahamian’s death in 2005:

“His finest achievement was that he made British music lovers more familiar with French music.  Working with Toni Mayer, cultural attaché at the embassy in London, Felix organized over 100 concerts for the Free French during the Second World War.  Not just Debussy and Ravel, but also Fauré, Saint-Saëns, Roussel, Florent Schmitt — not forgetting Baroque masters such as Rameau and Couperin, through Berlioz to all of Les Six and on to Messiaen.  For the audiences, it was like an education that had previously been manquée.”

As for Aprahamian’s relationship with Florent Schmitt, it dates from the year 1937 when the two men met one another at the International Society for Contemporary Music (ISCM) Festival in Paris.  That initial acquaintance would turn into strong a friendship in the 1950s.  Aprahamian visited Schmitt at his residence in St. Cloud, and Schmitt would do the same during his trip to London in 1956 when his ballet La Tragédie de Salomé was being performed there.

Florent Schmitt (l.) and Ralph Vaughan-Williams (r.), photographed in London in 1956.

Florent Schmitt (l.) and Ralph Vaughan-Williams (r.), photographed in London in 1956.

It was during the London trip that Aprahamian organized a meeting between Schmitt and the English composer Ralph Vaughan-Williams, whose friendship with Schmitt dated back to Vaughan-Williams’ stay in Paris before the First World War.  A photograph taken at the time shows the two elderly gentlemen in conversation; we can only speculate about the memories they might have been sharing from those halcyon days a half-century before.

Felix Aprahamian would also be present for the premiere performance of Schmitt’s last orchestral work, the Symphony No. 2, Opus 137, which was performed by Charles Munch and the O.R.T.F. Orchestra at the Strasbourg Music Festival on June 15, 1958.

In fact, a photo snapped at the conclusion of the concert shows Schmitt departing the concert hall on the arm of Felix Aprahamian.

Florent Schmitt and Felix Aprahamian at the world premiere performance of Schmitt's Symphony No. 2 in Strasbourg, France in June 1958.  Also pictured are composer-critic Gustave Samazeuilh, pianist Frank Mannheimer and musicologist Marc Pincherle.

Florent Schmitt and Felix Aprahamian at the world premiere performance of Schmitt’s Symphony No. 2 in Strasbourg, France in June 1958. Also pictured are composer-critic Gustave Samazeuilh, pianist Frank Mannheimer and musicologist Marc Pincherlé.

The photograph is emblematic of a friendship between the old master and the younger impresario that was bound by mutual admiration and respect.

Barely two months later, Schmitt would pass away, just shy of his 88th birthday.  Having been born sandwiched between Claude Debussy and Maurice Ravel, he had outlasted both by decades — as well as the musical style that had given them their fame.

Speaking of which … Felix Aprahamian never wavered in his devotion to the French musical style of the early- and mid-1900s.

In the remaining decades of his life, he would continue to promote the work of the many French musicians he had been privileged to know personally, ranging from composers like Florent Schmitt, Albert Roussel, Francis Poulenc, Charles Tournemire, Maurice Duruflé, Jean Langlais and Olivier Messiaen … to conductors such as Ernest Ansermet, Charles Munch and Roger Désormière … to performers like the pianist Monique Haas and the cellist Pierre Fournier.

In his later years, Felix Aprahamian was a veritable walking encyclopedia of classical music in the 20th century.  In lectures and meetings, he would regale his audiences with anecdotes about the composers and musicians he had come to know.

Felix Aprahamian with Paul Schmitt, Florent Schmitt's grandson (1997)

Continuing the legacy: Florent Schmitt’s grandson, Paul Schmitt, visits with Felix Aprahamian in the gardens of the impresario’s house in Muswell Hill, London, in September 1997. Aprahamian’s home was always open to all who shared his love for classical music and the arts. [Photo courtesy of David Eccott.]

At the conclusion of one such event in the 1980s — a meeting of London press correspondents in the arts — one journalist was reported exclaiming, “That must be the most amazing example of sustained name-dropping I have ever heard!”

Felix Aprahamian with organist and protégé David Liddle at St. Paul's Cathedral, London

Felix Aprahamian with his protégé, the organist David Liddle, at St. Paul’s Cathedral, London (2001). [Photo: Oscar Rook]

Aprahamian also took on a protégé in David Liddle, an organist he had met in 1978 at Worcester College for the Blind.  Aprahamian would later arrange for Liddle to study with the organist André Marchal in Paris, and continued to nurture the young man’s career in the subsequent years.  It is a testament to the closeness of that relationship that Liddle would take “Aprahamian” as his middle name following the impresario’s death.

Recognition of Felix Aprahamian’s contributions to music manifested itself in numerous ways.  In 1994, on the occasion of his 80th birthday, Aprahamian was named an Honorary Member of the Royal Philharmonic Society.  The Nash Ensemble presented a concert in his honor to a sellout crowd at Wigmore Hall.  (Predictably, the program consisted of French music almost exclusively.)

As a person who never married, Felix Aprahamian lived in the same house in London’s Muswell Hill District from the age of five on.  It was described by many as a “shrine to music” containing one of the most complete private music libraries to be found anywhere — not to mention a grand piano and later a pipe organ.

The organist André Marchal dubbed the dwelling “La Montagne des Muses.”  Aprahamian’s own description was a bit different; he often referred to his home as “The House of Usher.”

Recalling Edgar Allen Poe’s famous story, this name took on a frightful new relevance when Aprahamian’s home almost did come crashing to the ground.  In a fruitless effort to find more usable space for his burgeoning collection of books and scores, he’d added shelves in the attic loft — which promptly caused giant cracks to appear in the structure.

Aprahamian’s home was always open to anyone serious about music, and he encouraged his visitors to consult the many books and scores in his library for their research.  David Liddle remembers “a house full of people, even on ordinary weekdays.”

Aprahamian serenade London 1998Realizing this aspect of Aprahamian’s welcoming nature and openness makes it easy to understand why we have this 1998 video, posted on YouTube, of a busload of brass musicians stopping by Aprahamian’s house to serenade him and then escorting him to an outdoor musical event commemorating the birthday of British composer Peter Warlock.

For Aprahamian, happenings like that were par for the course:  All in a day’s work — or all in a day’s fun.



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