Ernest Grosjean
Compositions for: Bass
WikipediaErnest Grosjean (18 December 1844 – 28 December 1936) was a French organist and composer.
Born in Vagney (Vosges), Ernest Grosjean was the nephew and pupil of Jean-Romary Grosjean, founder and director of the Journal des organistes.
He made his debut as organist in the cathedral of Uzès (Gard) in 1864, before competing for the position of organist, and later of maître de chapelle of the Verdun Cathedral, that he held from 1868 until 1935, even though the Jacquot-Jeanpierre organ of Rambervillers (Vosges), built in 1898, was dismantled during the First World War to preserve it. The instrument was rebuilt and inaugurated on 25 March 1935 jointly by the titular master
Marcel Dupré and abbot Pierre Camonin who succeeded him in June of the same year.
Ernest Grosjean was the maternal grandfather of Élisabeth Brasseur, a choral conductor who founded and directed in Versailles the Chorale Élisabeth Brasseur [fr] from 1920 to his death in 1972.
Grosjean wrote teaching works including a harmony course, which earned him the approval of several eminent composers; a quantity of works for the organ, 30 Verse, 82 Pieces, etc.; works for voices, piano and various instruments.
In the séries Les Maîtres Contemporains de l'Orgue (1912) by abbot
Joseph Joubert: