Page:  of 21
 
The Twentieth Century
Nadia and Lili Boulanger: Sister Composers

Caroline Potter

Although Lili Boulanger's reputation as a composer is growing, her elder sister, Nadia, remains better known as one of the most important composition teachers of the twentieth century than as a creative artist in her own right. Yet, Nadia helped prepare the ground, musically speaking, for her younger sister; she set a text, Les sirènes, for chorus and orchestra in 1905 that was set by Lili six years later, and, perhaps not surprisingly, they had many musical interests and influences in common.

The sisters were born into a cultured family (Nadia in 1887, Lili in 1893), the only two survivors of four daughters. Their father, Ernest Boulanger (1815-1900), had some success as an opera composer after winning the Prix de Rome in 1836 and ended his long career as a singing teacher at the Paris Conservatoire. One of his last pupils was Raïssa Myschetsky, who claimed to be a Russian princess (though there is no evidence to support this), and the pupil and master married in 1878.

At Lili's birth, their father had asked Nadia to vow that she would always take care of her sister, and throughout her life, Nadia kept her word, feeling her responsibility all the more because Lili never fully recovered from a bout of bronchial pneumonia contracted at the age of two. Nadia knew that, as their father was in his seventies when they were born, it would eventually fall to her to support her mother and sister. She entered the Paris Conservatoire at the age of ten and aimed to win as many prizes as possible in the shortest possible time. As early as 1903, she won a first prize in harmony, following this in 1904, before her seventeenth birthday, with first prizes in organ, fugue, and piano accompaniment. She reached the final round of the prestigious Prix de Rome competition for the first time in 1907.1 That year her cantata Selma failed to win a prize, but the following year she placed second (although she created a stir in the preliminary round when she wrote an instrumental fugue instead of the vocal fugue demanded by the judges). In

-536-

Questia Media America, Inc. www.questia.com

Publication Information: Article Title: The Twentieth Century: Nadia and Lili Boulanger Sister Composers. Contributors: Caroline Potter - author. Journal Title: Musical Quarterly. Volume: 83. Issue: 4. Publication Year: 2000. Page Number: 536.
This feature allows you to create and manage separate folders for your different research projects. To view markups for a different project, make that project your current project.
This feature allows you to save a link to the publication you are reading or view all the publications you have put on your bookshelf.
This feature allows you to save a link to the page you are reading, which you can later return to from Projects.
This feature allows you to highlight words or phrases on the publication page you are reading.
This feature allows you to save a note you write on the publication page you are reading.
This feature allows you to create a citation to the page you are reading that you can paste into your paper. Highlight a passage to include that passage as a quotation.
This feature allows you to save a reference to a publication you are reading for your bibliography or generate a bibliography you can paste into your paper.
This feature allows you to print a range of pages or a single page from the item you are reading, including your notes or highlights (IE users must have "print background colors and image" setting selected.)
This feature allows you to look up words in a dictionary, thesaurus or encyclopedia.
  About Questia Tools
Close Window  
Questia's powerful research tools allow you to highlight, take notes, bookmark and even create instant citations and bibliographies. To use these features and save hours of work, you must be a subscriber to the Questia service.
Need a Questia account?
Choose a subscription plan to save tons of time, stress and hassle, and experience faster, easier research.

» Click here for our subscription plans

Already have a Questia account? Login now!
Error
Working...
Choose one of the options for printing:
Print this page (No Charge)
Print pages to *
Print pages to *
Quick Print Center
View Shopping Cart
*charges may apply