Thomé, Francis, (baptized François Luc Joseph)

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Thomé, Francis, (baptized François Luc Joseph)

Thomé, Francis, (baptized François Luc Joseph), French composer and teacher; b. Port Louis, Mauritius, Oct. 18, 1850; d. Paris, Nov. 16, 1909. He went to Paris as a youth, and studied at the Cons, with Marmontel (piano), Duprato (harmony), and A. Thomas (composition), winning a premier prix for counterpoint and fugue (1870); then was active as a composer and teacher. He wrote the operas he Caprice de la Reine (Cannes, April 1892) and Le Château de Königsberg (Paris, April 22, 1896), the ballets Djemmah (1886), La Folie parisienne (1900), etc., the religious mystery play L’Enfant Jésus (1891), 2 symphonie odes, Hymne à la nuit and Vénus et Adonis, Piano Trio (1893), Violin Sonata (1901), numerous songs, and much piano music.

—Nicolas Slonimsky/Laura Kuhn/Dennis McIntire

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Thomé, Francis, (baptized François Luc Joseph)

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