Composers

Fernand de La Tombelle

Organ
Piano
Pump organ
Violin
Cello
Men's chorus
Voice
Mixed chorus
Flute
Oboe
Piece
Religious music
Offertories
Meditation
Fantasia
Postlude
Suite
Toccata
Canticle
Versets
by popularity

#

5 Pièces pour piano50 Pièces pour harmonium6 Cantiques6 Versets

A

Andante expressivoAndantinoAve verum

B

Berceuse

C

Cantilène et Vox Angelorum

E

Ego sum resurrectio et vita, Op.34

F

Fantaisie sur Deux ThèmesFantasy for Piano and Orchestra, Op.26

I

Interludes pour la messe 'Dominicis Infra Annum'

L

La fausse enchanteresseLes Vêpres du Commun des Saints

M

Marche NuptialeMéditation

N

Noël au village

O

OffertoireOffertoire ou sortieOffertoire pour le jour de Pâques

P

Pastorale-OffertoirePiano Quartet, Op.24Piano Trio, Op.35Pièces d'orgue, Op.23Pièces d'orgue, Op.33Prélude et fugue

R

Rapsodie béarnaise

S

SortitaSuite d'Orgue sur des thèmes grégoriensSuite for 3 Cellos

T

Toccata in A-flat majorToccata in F minor

V

Violin Sonata, Op.40
Wikipedia
Antoine Louis Joseph Gueyrand Fernand Fouant de La Tombelle (3 August 1854 – 13 August 1928) was a French organist and composer.
Born in Paris, Fernand de La Tombelle had piano lessons in his childhood with his mother Louise Gueyraud, a pupil of Sigismund Thalberg and Franz Liszt. From the age of eighteen he took private organ and harmony lessons with Alexandre Guilmant. At the Conservatoire de Paris he studied counterpoint, fugue and composition with Théodore Dubois. For his compositions he was twice awarded the gold medal at the Grand Prix Pleyel.
In the following years he performed as a concert organist throughout France. From 1896 to 1904, he was the first harmony teacher at the Schola Cantorum. Among his students were Louis Boyer, Auguste Leguenant, Marc de Ranse, Blanche Selva, Déodat de Séverac, and Jean Vadon.
In addition to music, La Tombelle, who was interested in many things, was active as a writer and columnist, sculptor and painter, art photographer, music ethnologist and astronomer. His wife Henriette Delacoux de Marivault became known as a writer under the pseudonym Camille Bruno.