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Paul, Marie, Théodore, Vincent d'Indy, born in Paris on March 27, 1851 and died in the same city on December 2, 1931, is a French composer and prolific teacher. He was one of the creators of the Schola Cantorum de Paris.
One of his first works, composed between 1869 and 1872, was a symphony in A minor, which he nicknamed "Italian". It was inspired by a trip he made to Italy at that time. Each movement represents a city: Rome for the imposing first movement, Florence for the scherzo, Venice for the slow movement, and Naples for the final.
Fervaal, Op.40, musical action in three acts and a prologue, on a poem by Vincent d'Indy, was composed from 1881 to 1895, published by Durand. Its creation took place at the Théâtre de la Monnaie in Brussels, Belgium, on March 12, 1897.
The most famous of the symphonies on nature, the Symphony on a French mountain song, Op.25, composed in 1886, is published by Hamelle.
Admirer of his orchestral genius, Claude Debussy saluted the quiet boldness of Vincent d'Indy to go further than himself.
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