Maurice Jaubert, Date of Birth, Place of Birth, Date of Death

    

Maurice Jaubert

French composer

Date of Birth: 03-Jan-1900

Place of Birth: Nice, Provence-Alpes-CĂ´te d'Azur, France

Date of Death: 19-Jun-1940

Profession: composer, lawyer

Nationality: France

Zodiac Sign: Capricorn


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About Maurice Jaubert

  • Maurice Jaubert (1900–1940) was a French composer.
  • Born in Nice on January 3, 1900, he was the second son of François Jaubert, a lawyer who would become the president of the Nice bar, and of the former HaydĂ©e Faraut.
  • He received his high school education at the LycĂ©e MassĂ©na, where he graduated in 1916.
  • During this period, he also enrolled at the Nice Conservatory of music where he studied harmony, counterpoint and piano.
  • He was awarded the first piano prize in 1916. Jaubert left for Paris and studied law and literature at the Sorbonne.
  • When he returned to his native town in 1919, he was the youngest lawyer in France.
  • His first compositions date back this period but soon after he undertook his military service and became officer in engineering.
  • Demobilized in 1922, Jaubert decided to give up law practice and devote all his time to music.
  • The next year, he completed his musical education in Paris with Albert Groz. Jaubert’s compositions at the time include songs, piano pieces, chamber music, and divertissements.
  • He wrote his first stage music in 1925 for a play by Calderon, Le Magicien prodigieux, using the Pleyela.
  • He was then hired by Pleyel to record rolls on the Pleyela, a revolutionary player piano at the time.
  • Indeed, Jaubert was always attracted by technical innovations that could serve his artistic aspirations.
  • While working on this play, he met a young soprano, Marthe BrĂ©ga, who would sing most of his vocal composItions.
  • They married in 1926, with Maurice Ravel as Jaubert’s best man.
  • They had a daughter, Françoise, in 1927. In 1929, while pursuing his work for the concert hall and the stage, Maurice Jaubert began writing and conducting for cinema.
  • Among his most important collaborations in the following decade were Alberto Cavalcanti’s Le Petit Chaperon Rouge; Jacques and Pierre PrĂ©vert’s L'Affaire est dans le sac; Jean Vigo’s Zero for Conduct and L’Atalante; RenĂ© Clair’s Quatorze Juillet and Le Dernier Milliardaire; Julien Duvivier’s Carnet de bal (Life Dances On) and La Fin du Jour (The End of a Day); Henri Storck’s Belgian documentaries LĂŽle de Pâques and Regards sur la Belgique ancienne; and Marcel Carné’s DrĂ´le de drame, HĂ´tel du Nord, Quai des brumes (Port of Shadows), and Le Jour se lève (Daybreak). Although he understood and appreciated film, scoring them was but one of Jaubert's creative activities.
  • As music director of PathĂ©-Nathan studio, he conducted the film scores of several other composers, including Arthur Honegger and Darius Milhaud.
  • He regularly conducted at concerts in France and abroad.
  • His writings comprise articles and lectures, as well as a large number of letters that capture his political opinions.
  • how he viewed his times, and his musical tastes (for example, he was a strong supporter of Kurt Weill when that composer was widely misunderstood). War, however, disrupted Jaubert's artistic path.
  • Mobilized on September 1939, he joined an engineering company he would command as a reserve captain.
  • His letters to his wife reflect a spirit of sacrifice tinged with deep humanism.
  • Jaubert did not live to his last two compositions, written at his base camp.
  • Fatally wounded in action, he died a few hours later at the Baccarat Hospital on June 19, 1940. Biography attributed to Emmanuel Chamboredon from Milan Records.

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