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・ Robert Carter III
・ Robert Carter Jett
・ Robert Carter Nicholas, Sr.
・ Robert Carter Pitman
・ Robert Carthew Reynolds
・ Robert Cartwright
・ Robert Caruso
・ Robert Carver
・ Robert Carver (composer)
・ Robert Carver (painter)
・ Robert Cary
・ Robert Cary (died c. 1431)
・ Robert Cary (priest)
・ Robert Cary Long, Jr.
・ Robert Cary-Williams
Robert Casadesus
・ Robert Casciola
・ Robert Case
・ Robert Casey
・ Robert Casey (journalist)
・ Robert Cashner
・ Robert Casilla
・ Robert Caspary
・ Robert Cassels
・ Robert Cassen
・ Robert Castaigne
・ Robert Castel
・ Robert Castelli
・ Robert Caswell
・ Robert Catalano


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Robert Casadesus : ウィキペディア英語版
Robert Casadesus

Robert Casadesus (7 April 1899 – 19 September 1972) was a renowned 20th-century French pianist and composer. He was the most prominent member of a famous musical family, being the nephew of Henri Casadesus and Marius Casadesus, husband of Gaby Casadesus, and father of Jean Casadesus.
==Biography==
Robert Casadesus was born and died in Paris, and studied there at the Conservatoire with Louis Diémer, taking a ''Premier Prix'' (First Prize) in 1913 and the Prix Diémer in 1920.
Robert then entered the class of Lucien Capet, who had exceptional influence. Capet had founded a famous quartet that bore his name (Capet Quartet) and in which two of Robert’s uncles played: Henri and Marcel.
The Quartet often rehearsed in the Casadesus home, and so it was that Robert was initiated into chamber music. The Beethoven Quartets held no secret for him—he knew them backwards and forwards without ever having played them.
Beginning in 1922, Casadesus collaborated with the composer Maurice Ravel on a project to create piano rolls of a number of his works. Casadesus and Ravel also shared the concert platform in France, Spain and England. Casadesus toured widely as a piano soloist and often performed with his wife, the pianist Gaby (L'Hôte) Casadesus, whom he married in 1921.
From 1935 Casadesus taught at the American Conservatory at Fontainebleau. He and his family spent the Second World War years in the United States and had a home in Princeton, New Jersey. He and Gaby established the Fontainebleau School at Newport, Rhode Island after the fall of France. In 1942 the Fontainebleau School was moved to Great Barrington, Massachusetts, in the Berkshires. After the war, in 1946, Robert Casadesus, now Director of the American Conservatory oversaw its return to Fontainebleau. His pupils included Claude Helffer, Grant Johannesen, Monique Haas, Mary Louise Boehm and William Eves, who appeared on the ''Bell Telephone Hour'' fine arts documentary TV series and was a longtime piano instructor at Bowdoin College.
Robert and Gaby Casadesus had three children, Jean, Guy and Therese. Casadesus died in Paris, 19 September 1972, after a brief illness and only a few months after the death of his son Jean in an automobile accident. Gaby Casadesus died in Paris on 12 November 1999. In her later years she edited the works of Ravel for G. Schirmer, Inc.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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