La Revue musicale
Cover of La Revue musicale (1927). | |
Editor | Henry Prunières |
---|---|
Frequency | Monthly |
First issue | 1920 |
Final issue | 1940 |
Country | France |
Language | French |
La Revue musicale was a music magazine founded by Henry Prunières in 1920.[1] La Revue musicale of Prunières was undoubtedly the first music publishing magazine giving as much attention to the quality of editing, iconography, and illustration. In each issue (9 per year), there was plenty of information on the musical and choreographic life in many countries.
Its aim was to support the profound changes taking place in the music of the period while simultaneously showing affection for the music of the past. Avoiding intransigent nationalism that marked French classical music before the World War I, the magazine became a reference point for a segment of European music through the interwar period.[2] After 20 years of methodically building a new music firmly based on its adherence to Classicism, the events of World War II made shut down the magazine in 1940.
Collaborators
Many writers, colorists and illustrators collaborated with the magazine, among them:
- Émile Chartier
- Gabriele D'Annunzio
- Philippe Barres,
- Victor Basch
- Julien Benda,
- Paul Claudel,
- Jean Cocteau,
- Colette,
- André Gide,
- Edouard Herriot,
- Emil Ludwig,
- Georges Servières,
- Maurice Maeterlinck,
- Countess Anna de Noailles,
- Jacques Maritain,
- Henri de Regnier,
- Romain Rolland,
- Andre Suares,
- Paul Valéry,
- Boris de Schloezer.[3]
- Antoine Bourdelle,
- Hermine David,
- André Derain,
- Maxime Dethomas,
- Raoul Dufy,
- André Dunoyer de Segonzac,
- Othon Friesz,
- Demetrios Galanis,
- Natalia Goncharova,
- Max Jacob,
- Marie Laurencin,
- Pablo Picasso.
References
- ↑ Duchesneau, Michel. La Revue musicale (1920–40) and the founding of a modern music (PDF) (in French). Université de Montréal. p. 743.
- ↑ Lavoie, Marie-Noëlle. Dance in Henry Prunières's La Revue musicale (1920–40): Between the early and the modern (PDF) (in French). Université de Montréal. p. 761..
- ↑ Barbara Dobbs Mackenzie, Zdravko Blažeković (2009). Music's intellectual history. Répertoire International de la Littérature Musicale. p. nn. ISBN 1932765050.
- Attribution
- This article is based on the translation of the corresponding article of the Spanish Wikipedia. A list of contributors can be found there in the History section.