Composers

Eugène Louis-Marie Jancourt

Bassoon
Piano
Cello
Piece
Étude
Exercise
Method
Theory
For beginners
by popularity
24 Exercices mélodiques faciles et progressifs, Op.98Etude du basson perfectionné, Op.58Grande étude pour le basson, Op.55Méthode théorique et pratique pour le basson, Op.15Rêverie, Op.61Solo No.2, Op.52Solo No.3, Op.53Solo No.4, Op.54Solo No.6, Op.66Solo No.7, Op.99Solo No.9, Op.123
Wikipedia
Eugène Louis-Marie Jancourt (15 December 1815 – 29 January 1901) was a French bassoonist, composer, and pedagogue. A virtuoso bassoonist and teacher at the Paris Conservatoire, Jancourt is mostly known for his method books and the system innovations he made to the “Buffet” style bassoon. He, along with his contemporary and fellow bassoonist Julius Weissenborn, is considered by many scholars to be one of the most important bassoonists of the 19th century.
Jancourt was born in Château-Thierry, France on December 15, 1815. He grew up surrounded by music and began formally studying flute at age eight. Throughout his childhood he also learned violin and clarinet before switching to the bassoon because he was “impressed by the timbre and character” of the instrument. He proved to be very capable at the instrument and was soon accepted into the Paris Conservatoire at the age of nineteen. His teacher, François René Gebauer, gave Jancourt one of his own bassoons after he saw the terrible condition that Jancourt's bassoon was in. Afterwards, he went on to win the Conservatoire competition in only his second year. Once he graduated in 1837, Jancourt free-lanced in Paris, playing in concerts at the Hôtel de Ville, the Athénée Royal, and the Concert-Rooms of Hertz, Érard, and Pleyel, before he was appointed the principal bassoon position with the l’Orchestre de l’Opéra-Comique. His playing was said to have been known for its “purity and for a charm of which, in its resemblance to the human voice, avoided all elements of the grotesque.” It was during this time that Jancourt began composing solo works for the bassoon although it had not yet been recognized as a solo instrument. Between 1843 and 1869, Jancourt attained a principal bassoon position with the Théâtre Italien, the bandmaster position with the 5th Subdivision of the la Garde nationale, and became a member of the Société des Concerts du Conservatoire, a membership he would hold for 30 years. He also traveled and toured in London, Italy, and France while never straying too far away from his native Paris. It was, however, during the 1840s that Jancourt's composing really blossomed. He became a very prolific composer and wrote mostly bassoon “concert pieces that are very beautiful and still a joy to perform.” His last appearance as a performer came in 1877 in Angers, France. Once he concluded his performing career, Jancourt became a renowned teacher at the Paris Conservatoire in 1875, his former school. He would remain at the conservatory until 1891 when he retired and continued to make improvements to the bassoon in its mechanical deficiencies. Eugène Jancourt died on January 29, 1901 in Boulogne-ser-Seine at the age of 85.
While teaching at the Paris Conservatoire, Jancourt dedicated his time to composing and modifying the bassoon in its form at the time to make it a more reliable solo instrument. Working along with his colleagues Louise-Auguste Buffet, Frédéric Triébert, and Pierre Goumas, Jancourt made several key contributions to the improvement of the French bassoon that are still in use today. Among the many advancements they made to the bassoon, the most important ones were: exchanging the former key saddles for rod keys and pillars, adding the whisper key, enabling low register notes to be played much more softly and easily, replacing various keys with ring mechanisms triggered by the fingers to give the notes more security, better intonation, and avoiding large finger motions while working the keys. They also rebuilt the bassoon with 22 keys, a more mathematically calculated ore to produce the best sound, adding 22 new trills. The smaller bore used in the construction of the French bassoon also allowed for the higher register to resonate better, allowing French composers more flexibility. Maurice Ravel, Henri Tomasi, André Jolivet, and Alexandre Tansman are prime examples. They officially published their new alterations in Jancourt's Etude du Basoon perfectionné à anneaux mobiles, plateau et 22 Clés comprenant des Excerices pour l’emploi des nouvelles Clés, Op. 58. These modifications helped renovate the instrument and create what is now the modern French bassoon. Although today the use of the Jancourt-Buffet system bassoon has become less frequent outside France many French bassoonists only use this model.
Besides being a well-known performer, Jancourt became the most prolific bassoon composer of all time, publishing 119 works and writing many method and technique books to help develop the bassoon as a solo instrument. His most famous method book, the Grande methode theorique et pratique, Op. 15, helped to establish himself as the leading bassoon pedagogue at the time. His oeuvre comprises entirely bassoon concert pieces and etude books that demonstrate the bassoon's capabilities. This became, and remains, as one of the most complete and well documented bassoon tutors for the bassoon, emphasizing tone vibrato and embellishment along with fundamental technique. Among his many works for the bassoon, Jancourt was well known for writing transcriptions of other pieces to make them adaptable for the bassoon. For example, he used a theme from the Allegretto of Beethoven's Symphony No. 7 as root for a work he wrote for bassoon and piano. His Grande methode is widely recognized as the most expansive and detailed bassoon tutors ever written and is still used today.