Charles Lebouc

French cellist
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroFrench cellist
PlacesFrance
wasMusician Cellist Composer Educator
Work fieldAcademia Music
Gender
Male
Birth22 December 1822, Besançon, canton of Besançon-Est, arrondissement of Besançon, Doubs
Death6 March 1893Hyères, canton of La Crau, arrondissement of Toulon, Var (aged 70 years)
The details

Biography

Charles Joseph Lebouc (22 December 1822, Besançon – 6 March 1893, Hyères) was a French cellist.

He attended the Conservatoire in Paris where he studied under Olive Charlier Vaslin (1794–1889) and then Louis Norblin, and later became a cello professor. He played chamber music. He composed some pieces for the cello with piano accompaniment and also wrote "Méthode complete et pratique de Violoncelle." He won first prize in cello in 1842 when he was a student of Auguste Franchomme, and first prize in harmony in 1844 as a student of Fromental Halévy.

In later years he organized annual private concerts on Shrove Tuesday, and on this occasion in 1886 (9 March) the first performance of the musical divertissement, Carnival of the Animals by Saint-Saëns was given, in which Lebouc played the well-known cello solo, The Swan.

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