Madeleine de Valmalète


Madeleine de Valmalète, born July 28, 1899, in Montreuil, died August 2, 1999, in Marseille, was a French classical pianist.

Biography

A pupil of Joseph Morpain and Isidor Philipp, Madeleine obtained a 1st prize from the National Conservatory of Music in Paris at the age of 14. She won another first prize at the Isidor Philipp competition the following year. Writing to the latter to congratulate him on having developed such a talent, Saint-Saëns will say of her, after a performance of his Danse macabre: “virtuosity completely achieved, only the music remains”. One could not better describe her playing, as poetic as it is vigorous. After the First World War, she began an international career as a concert performer and played under the direction of Gabriel Pierné, Wilhelm Furtwangler, Arturo Toscanini, while she rubbed shoulders with Gabriel Fauré, Ravel, Jacques Thibaud, Ninon Vallin, Lotte Lehmann and Yehudi Menuhin.
In love with the South of France, she moved to Marseille in 1926 and founded a piano school there. From 1949 to 1961, invited by Alfred Cortot, she taught at the Normal School of Music in Paris. At the same time, in 1955 she created a competition for piano lovers and traveled all over France to preside over sessions in many cities. In 1962, she moved to Grenoble where she taught until 1974 at the Regional Conservatory of Grenoble, directed at the time by Éric-Paul Stekel, then by André Lodéon. She then returned to her beloved city of Marseilles where she continued to teach privately while giving a few recitals, because she retained an extraordinary dynamism and technique until a very advanced age. In 1992, she still wanted to “delight with Mozart” and played four of his Sonatas for a final recording.
The pianist Idil Biret, who met her in 1946 in Ankara, left a moving account of her elegant playing as well as the encouragement received during her musical training in Paris. She evokes her musical intelligence and her inspiration during recitals given each year in Paris at the Salle Gaveau.

Discography

https://arbiterrecords.org/catalog/madeleine-de-valmalete-rediscovered-master/
  • Legendary French pianists, Monique Haas, Madeleine de Valmalète, Meloclassic label, Saint-Saëns Concerto n° 2, Mozart Concerto K271 Jeunehomme

Educational books

  • Seven pieces for easy piano on French popular melodies of the 18th century
  • Five excerpts from the collection "I already play..." :

Posterity

, and co-founder with him of one of the largest artist agencies in Europe: the Bureau de Concerts de Valmalète. His office was taken over in 1957 by Marcel's daughter, Marie-Anne de Valmalète, then by her grandson Hervé Corre de Valmalète. In homage to Madeleine de Valmalète, the city of Marseille gave her name to a street in its fourteenth arrondissement. The famous piano competition survived him until 2012.

Music resources