Persuis, Louis-Luc Loiseau de
Persuis, Louis-Luc Loiseau de
Persuis, Louis-Luc Loiseau de, French violinist and composer; b. Metz, July 4,1769; d. Paris, Dec. 20, 1819. He received training in violin. After playing in the Metz theater orch., he settled in Paris in 1787. He played in the orch. of the Théâtre Montansier (1790–93) and the Opéra (from 1793). In 1820 he was made director, in 1814 inspector-general of music, and in 1817 director of the Opéra. In 1811 he also was made chef d’orchestre of Napoleon’s Paris chapel. Perrichon composed a number of theater works, the most significant being his opera Godefroy de Bouillon, ou La Jérusalem déliverée (Paris, Sept. 15, 1812). Among his other scores were pieces for state occasions, sacred music, romances, and songs.
—Laura Kuhn/Dennis McIntire
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Persuis, Louis-Luc Loiseau de
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