Paladilhe, Emile
Paladilhe, Emile
Paladilhe, Emile, French composer; b. Montpellier, June 3, 1844; d. Paris, Jan. 6, 1926. He entered the Paris Cons, in 1853, and was a pupil of Marmontel (piano), Benoist (organ), and Halévy (counterpoint). He won 1st prize for piano and organ in 1857, and the Grand Prix de Rome in 1860 with the cantata Le Czar Ivan IV (Paris Opéra, 1860). He brought out the comic opera Le Passant in Paris (April 24, 1872), followed by L’Amour africain (May 8, 1875), Suzanne (Dec. 30, 1878), Diana (Feb. 23, 1885), the opera Patrie (Dec. 20, 1886), and Les Saintes Maries de la mer, a sacred lyric drama (Montpellier, 1892). He also produced 2 masses, Sym., and numerous songs (Mandolinata, Premières pensées, Mélodies écossaises). In 1892 he succeeded Guiraud as member of the Institut de France.
—Nicolas Slonimsky/Laura Kuhn/Dennis McIntire