Olivier Latry
Olivier Jean-Claude Latry is a French organist, improviser, teacher and composer who has served as one of the four titular organists of Notre-Dame de Paris since 1985 and is a professor of organ in the Conservatoire de Paris.
Family and education
Latry was born in Boulogne-sur-Mer in northern France, the youngest of three sons of Robert Latry and Andrée Thomas. His early interest in the organ came from listening to recordings of Pierre Cochereau, organist of Notre-Dame de Paris from 1955 to 1984. His first experience on a church organ was in 1974, when he played at the wedding of a family friend. During the homily, his arms supposedly fell onto the organ console, causing a dissonant sound.Having begun his musical studies in Boulogne-sur-Mer, Latry later enrolled in an organ class at the conservatory in Saint-Maur-des-Fossés near Paris with the blind organist Gaston Litaize, whom he had heard in concert, and took composition classes with Jean-Claude Raynaud at the Conservatoire de Paris. Both his teachers had studied under Marcel Dupré.
Latry's first wife was Marie-Thérèse Triton, whom he divorced in 2011. Since 2012 he has been married to Shin Young Lee. He is the father of three children.
Career
In 1983 Latry was appointed professor of organ in the Catholic University of Paris and subsequently held similar roles at conservatories in Rheims, Saint-Maur-des-Fossés and Paris.In 1985, following the death of Pierre Cochereau, he became one of the four co-titular organists at Notre-Dame in Paris alongside Yves Devernay, Philippe Lefèbvre and Jean-Pierre Leguay. He is the only one still in the role.
As a concert performer Latry has played in over 40 countries across five continents, in particular in the United States, where he gave his first recitals in 1986 at the invitation of the American Guild of Organists.
On 7 December 2024 Latry was the first to play the organ of Notre-Dame in public during the reopening ceremony five years after the fire that damaged parts of the cathedral in 2019. Although the instrument survived intact, it needed to be cleaned and restored, and Latry tuned it at nighttime ahead of the reopening.