I'm interested in hearing what people's experiences and opinions are surrounding these different groups of French-ish composers who worked in the period of roughly 1920-1970 (though some individuals among them outlasted that long period).
For those who aren't aware, 'Les Six' refers to a loosely-knit group of Parisian composers who, for a short period, worked towards similar musical goals, in reaction to both Wagnerism and France's own Debussyism. Erik Satie was a sort of on-again off-again associate of the group and they frequently collaborated with Jean Cocteau and other French poets from the period. The original members (all six associated for a year at the most) were:
Georges Auric
Darius Milhaud
Francis Poulenc
Germaine Tailleferre
Louis Durey
Arthur Honegger
By 1923, the group had lost its unity and Satie ironically noted that "Les Six are Auric, Milhaud and Poulenc." I'm not as interested in the short period where they worked together (1920-1923) as much as the individual careers that each composer developed. Most of them composed for many decades to follow and produced some incredible libraries of pieces.
Info at
https://www.scena.org/lsm/sm6-1/coq-en.htmlFollowing the fragmentation of Les Six, another group called the Arcueil School came together under the influence of Erik Satie. This group consisted of:
Henri Sauguet
Maxime Jacob
Henri Cliquet-Pleyel
Roger Desormières
Though I've not heard all that much about these composers, any info would definitely be appreciated. Lastly, I am interested in hearing about my favorite loosely knit group of composers who were not only influenced by Les Six, but were all emigres from different countries from around Europe. "L'Ecole de Paris", as they came to be known, consisted of:
Bohuslav Martinu (Czech)
Tibor Harsanyi (Hungary)
Marcel Mihalovici (Rpmania)
Conrad Beck (Switzerland)
Aleksandr Tcherepnin (Russia)
Alexandre Tansman (Poland)
Tansman was invited by Milhaud and Honegger to become the "seventh" member of Les Six in the early 1920s, though he abstained.
Anyway, this topic is considerably broad, but that's on purpose, since this is a period that seems to often get a little lost in the mix as it is overshadowed by the great period of French romantic/impressionistic music (Faure, Ravel, Debussy) that preceded it and the more radically innovative twentieth century trends that came later (serialism, minimalism, Messiaen). While there is a goodly amount of recordings dedicated to these works, it would seem that there's not all that much dialogue surrounding it, although it is a period of intense profundity and several instances of musical experiment and innovation. I've recently been studying a crapton of different works by the composers I listed above and I'm astounded at how a lot of this stuff gets brushed by. Anyway, I'm very interested to hear anybody's thoughts on this stuff and would love to discuss any number of individual pieces by any of these composers. Some recent things I've come across that I like very much are Auric's
Sonate in Fa for piano and Martinu's
Piano Quartet.