Napoleon Distelmans

Belgian musician
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroBelgian musician
PlacesBelgium
wasMusician Composer
Work fieldMusic
Gender
Male
Instruments:Viola
Birth3 June 1884
Death19 August 1946 (aged 62 years)
Star signGemini
The details

Biography

Napoleon Distelmans (1884 in Berchem – 1946) was a Flemish violist with the Antwerp Conservatory in the early 1900s.

Distelmans's father was a shoemaker who dreamed of training his children to be musicians. Distelmans's mother died while giving birth to her sixth child, and the children's father raised them to play in a string quartet. As a young man, Napoleon won the prestigious Prix de Rome viola, which awarded him a scholarship to study with one of the leading viola players of this era in London.

The language of study at the Antwerp Conservatory had just been changed from French to Dutch at the instigation of Flemish nationalist composer Peter Benoit when the Distelmans brothers enrolled there. The school remained a breeding ground for Flemish nationalism long afterwards. The cello-playing brother of the quartet particularly became a fierce nationalist, which contributed to the dissolution of the quartet during World War II.

Napoleon also was the viola soloist for some time in the Orchestra of the Antwerp Zoological Society. The concerts of the Society were known to attract, at times, Gustav Mahler, Maurice Ravel, Igor Stravinsky and Sergei Rachmaninoff to conduct their own works there in the hall next to Central Railway Station.


The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 28 Apr 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.