Louis Coerne

Louis Adolphe Coerne (February 27, 1870 – September 11, 1922) was an American composer and music educator.

Louis Coerne
Born
Louis Adolphe Coerne

(1870-02-27)February 27, 1870
Newark, New Jersey
DiedSeptember 11, 1922(1922-09-11) (aged 52)
Boston, Massachusetts
Education
OccupationComposer, educator
Spouse(s)
Adele Turton
(m. 1897)
Signature

Life and works

He was born in Newark, New Jersey, and was educated at Harvard University, where he studied under John Knowles Paine, and at the Stuttgart Conservatory, Germany.[1]

He married Adele Turton in 1897.[1]

Coerne wrote a number of pedagogical pieces for piano, and also composed a number of orchestral works, one of which, the tone poem Excalibur, Op. 180, was recorded by Karl Krueger with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in the late 1960s, and reissued on CD in 2006 by Bridge Records. His cantata, Hiawatha, Op. 18 was premiered in Munich in 1893 and performed by the Boston Symphony Orchestra in 1894.

Coerne's opera Zenobia, Op. 66, premiered in Bremen, Germany, in 1905, was the first opera by an American composer to be performed in Germany. Earlier that year, Harvard had conferred on Coerne the degree of Ph.D., with the score of Zenobia and his book, The Evolution of Modern Orchestration (published in 1908), serving as his thesis.

Other operas composed by Coerne:

  • A Woman of Marblehead, Op. 40
  • Sakuntala, Op. 67
  • The Maiden Queen, Op. 69

Coerne taught at Smith College, Harvard, and Connecticut College. He died in Boston, Massachusetts.[2]

References

  1. The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography. XIII. James T. White & Company. 1906. pp. 411–412. Retrieved August 22, 2020 via Google Books.
  2. "Dr Louis A. Coerne, Composer, Is Dead". The Boston Globe. September 12, 1922. p. 9. Retrieved August 22, 2020 via Newspapers.com.
  • Howard, John Tasker (1939). Our American Music: Three Hundred Years of It. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell Company.
  • "Coerne and His New Opera", in: New York Times, December 17, 1905.
  • Coerne, Louis Adolphe: The Evolution of Modern Orchestration (New York: The Macmillan Company, 1908). With introductory note by H.E. Krehbiel.
  • Sadie, Stanley (ed.): The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (London: Macmillan, 1980).
  • Who's Who in America (1912–13).


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