Camille Saint-Saëns Biography
(One of the Greatest Organists and Composers of the Romantic Era)Birthday: October 9, 1835 (Libra)
Born In: Paris, France
Advanced SearchCamille Saint-Saens was the French composer and organist who wrote the famous opera ‘Samson et Dalila’. A major musical figure of the Romantic era, he was also a very successful pianist and a knowledgeable scholar of music history. He was a child prodigy in music who gave his first concert at the tender age of ten. Furthering his passion for music he studied organ and composition at the Paris Conservatory and went on to pursue a career as an organist at the famed Church of the Madeleine in Paris. A meeting with the celebrated Hungarian composer and teacher Franz Liszt led to an enduring friendship over the course of which Liszt guided and influenced the budding career of the younger Saint-Saens. Over the years he made a name for himself as a brilliant pianist and composer and established himself in a thriving freelance career. He was much sought-after not only in his native France, but also in other European countries, Britain and the Americas. He also held a teaching position once, and even though he taught for less than a period of five years, he left a deep impact on the development of French music. In spite of his illustrious professional career, his personal life was not a happy one, consistently marred by familial problems.
Quick FactsFrench Celebrities Born In October
Also Known As: Charles-Camille Saint-Saëns
Died At Age: 86
Family:Spouse/Ex-: Marie Laure Emile Truffot
father: Jacques Joseph Victor Saint-Saëns
mother: Clémence Saint-Saëns
children: André Saint-Saëns, Jean-François Saint-Saëns
Born Country: France
Quotes By Camille Saint-Saëns Organists
Died on: December 16, 1921
place of death: Algiers, France
Notable Alumni: Conservatoire De Paris
Cause of Death: Heart Attack
City: Paris
Founder/Co-Founder: Société Nationale de Musique
More Factseducation: Conservatoire De Paris
awards: Chevalier of the Legion of Honour (1867)
British Royal Victorian Order (1902)
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French CelebritiesComposersConductorsFrench MenLibra Musicians Childhood & Early LifeHe was born on 9 October 1835 as the only child of Jacques-Joseph-Victor Saint-Saëns and his wife, Françoise-Clémence in Paris. His father was an official in the French Ministry of the Interior.Unfortunately Victor Saint-Saens died of an illness shortly after the birth of Camille. Thus he spent his childhood with his mother and her widowed aunt, Charlotte Masson, who taught the young boy the basics of piano playing.He became a pupil of Camille-Marie Stamaty when he was seven and received excellent training from him. He started displaying his genius from an early age and his mother soon recognized his potential.He had all the traits of a child prodigy but his concerned mother did not want him to become too famous too soon. Therefore, she restricted the number of public performances he gave. Even though he started performing in front of small audiences from the time he was five, he made his official public debut years later at the age of ten.Camille proved to be an outstanding student at school and excelled in many subjects like French literature, Latin and Greek, and mathematics. He also developed lifelong interests in philosophy, archaeology and astronomy.He enrolled at the Paris Conservatoire, France's most important music academy, in 1848. There his student compositions included a symphony in A major (1850) and a choral piece, ‘Les Djinns’ (1850), to a poem by Victor Hugo.