Music venue in Paris, France
Salle Érard
The salle Érard (French pronunciation: [sal eʁaʁ] ) is a music venue located in Paris, 13 rue du Mail in the 2nd arrondissement of Paris .
It is part of the hôtel particulier which belonged, from the 18th century, to the Érard [fr ] family of piano, harp and harpsichord manufacturers.
Small in size, but well isolated from the noises of the city, enjoying good acoustics, it is more particularly adapted to chamber music .[ 1]
During the 19th and the beginning of the 20th, it was the place of premières and debuts noted for both compositions and for interpreters, among which:
Érik Satie (orchestrations of his Gymnopédies by Claude Debussy ),
Jacques Ibert , les histoires (ten pieces for piano) (1923),
Nellie Melba ,
Ricardo Viñes ,
Maurice Ravel , Miroirs (1906), Menuet antique (1892), Histoires naturelles with Jane Bathori (1907), Sonate pour violon et piano (1927), Trois poèmes de Mallarmé (1914),
Camille Saint-Saens (1860).,[ 2]
Ignacy Jan Paderewski (1888),
Claude Debussy , Triptyque Estampes (1904), Le Promenoir des deux amants (1911),
Alexander Scriabin (1896),
Joseph Jongen ,
André Caplet , Conte fantastique with Micheline Kahn as the harpist, (1923)
Vladimir de Pachmann (1882),
Charles Valentin Alkan (1837) and (1880),
Francis Poulenc ,
Reynaldo Hahn , pianist Édouard Risler (1908),
Ernest Chausson , Viviane (1883),
César Franck , Le Chasseur maudit (1883),
Arthur Honegger , Le Cahier romand (1924),
Olivier Messiaen , Huit préludes (1930),
Maurice Delage , Sept haï-kaïs (1925),
Quatre poèmes hindous (1914),
Francis Planté ,[ 3]
Stéphan Elmas ou Youra Guller .
Beethoven Sonata No. 29 in Bb Major "Hammerklavier" with Franz Liszt at the piano.
Before the construction of the Maison de la Radio (1963), the hall served as a recording studio for the Radiodiffusion française .
Nowadays, only the salon sees the organization of concerts, the volumes of the proper room having been reconverted (the volume of spaces is suggested by the organization of the roofs[ 4] as well as the old entrance facade at No. 11 rue Paul Lelong - Paris 02). Nevertheless, it remains prized for its acoustics and its past charged with both musical and artistic history.[ 5]
Salle Érard in London
The Salle Erard opened its London piano gallery and recital hall on 11 July 1894 on Great Marlborough Street, with a performance by Polish pianist, Ignacy Jan Paderewski . The recital hall could accommodate an audience of 300 people. The stained glass windows featured portraits of Saint-Saëns , Gounod , Liszt , Clara Schumann , Rubinstein , Wagner , Chopin , Sigismond Thalberg and Balfe .[ 6]
See also
References
External links
48°52′00″N 2°20′32″E / 48.8667°N 2.3422°E / 48.8667; 2.3422