Émile Decombes
Émile Descombes (8 August 1829 – 1912) was a French pianist and teacher.
Little is known about his life other than that he was one of the last pupils of Frédéric Chopin in Paris. He taught piano (the "classe préparatoire") at the Paris Conservatoire between 1875 and 1899,[1] where his students included Alfred Cortot, [[Reynaldo Hahn],[2][3] Gabriel Jaudoin, Joseph Morpain, Maurice Ravel, Édouard Risler,[4] Erik Satie (Descombes called him "the laziest student in the Conservatoire"[5]).
Besides his teaching, he was also active as the editor of a series of piano arrangements of classical piano concertos called the École du Piano – Choix de Concertos des Maîtres. Premiers Solos, which appeared with the Parisian publisher Auguste O'Kelly from 1875. It had reached 50 volumes by 1888.[6]
He was brother to the composer Achille Decombes (died 1893).
References
- ^ Catalogue of the Bibliothèque national de France, http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb14813861f/PUBLIC
- ^ Reynaldo Hahn.net
- ^ Amazon
- ^ Marston Records
- ^ Ensemble Sospeso New York
- ^ Axel Klein: O'Kelly. An Irish Musical Family in Nineteenth-Century France (Norderstedt: BoD, 2014, p. 223).