Élégie pour cor et piano

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Élégie pour cor et piano – Elegy for horn and piano – FP 168 is a short, one-movement work by the French composer Francis Poulenc, written in memory of the horn player Dennis Brain, who died in 1957. It was first performed in January 1958.

Poulenc had a profound admiration for the British horn player Dennis Brain.[1] When the latter died in a car crash in 1957, aged 36, Poulenc composed the Élégie as a tribute.[2] Unsure of the capabilities of the solo instrument, he sought the advice of the horn player Georges Barboteu before completing the piece.[3]

The Élégie was premiered by the BBC in a broadcast on 17 February 1958, played by Brain's former Philharmonia colleague Neill Sanders, with the composer at the piano.[2]

Structure

Recordings

References and sources

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI