Laurent Halleux fund

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The Laurent Halleux collection is the donation, to the library of the Royal Conservatory of Brussels, of printed scores and manuscripts from the Belgian violinist Laurent Halleux (1897–1964), by his daughter, Suzanne Keller-Halleux.

Student card of L. Halleux at the Royal Conservatory of Brussels

After having obtained the coveted Prix Vieuxtemps in 1912, Laurent Halleux (1897-1964), born in the Belgian city of Verviers where he studies at the local Conservatory, concludes his educational journey at the Royal Conservatory of Brussels with César Thomson and obtains the first violin prize in 1914. From 1912 onwards, aged only fifteen, he plays the second violin with his fellow students Alphonse Onnou, Germain Prévost and Fernand Quinet in the Pro Arte Quartet, that will receive, in 1932, thanks to its international popularity, the title of « Quartet to the Belgian Court ». Renowned for the interpretation of modernist and avant-garde works including those of Stravinsky, Milhaud, Honegger or Martinů, the quartet is also impassioned with the classic repertoire.

On the eve of WWII, three of the four members of the quartet migrate to the United States,[1] but when Onnou dies shortly after (1940), Halleux leaves the band in 1943 to successively join the Roth Quartet, the New London String Quartet and the Hungarian String Quartet. Naturalised American in 1945, he settles in L.A. to work with the Los Angeles Philharmonic as well as with the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and RKO Pictures studios to record film music.[2]

After an American career of more than twenty years as chamber musician and pedagogue,[3] he returns to Belgium in 1962 where he dies two years later.

The collection

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