Piano Solo
Piano + ...
For beginners
Composers

Jean-Chrisostome Hess

All Compositions

Compositions for: Piano

by popularity
3 Fantaisies-caprices, Opp.74-76David singing before Saul, Op.52La fête de NoëlLe bal de l'Opéra, Op.44Le chaletLe jour du reposMéthode de piano extrêmement facile, Op.69Morceau de salon avec final en carrillon sur 'Le grand Casimir'Ode à la luneOù vas-tu petit oiseau?, Op.17Pensées de Weber, Op.63Souvenir de 'Joconde'Styrienne de Mignon
Wikipedia
Jean-Chrisostome Hess (26 January 1816 – 8 March 1900) was one of the most prolific French composers of salon music for the piano as well as transcriptions of popular songs and arias from operas. He was also active as an organist, pianist, and teacher.
Since he always abbreviated his name as "J. Ch. Hess", his first names have often been misinterpreted as "Jean-Charles". His birth certificate, however, is clear about his real names.
Hess was born in Soufflenheim, Bas-Rhin, in the Alsace region of France. Nothing is known about his musical education, but as no traces of studies at any of the major conservatories have to come to light yet, it must be presumed that he had private teachers on piano and organ in his home town or perhaps in Strasbourg.
Like many composers of his time, he appears to have earned his living as a church organist. His first assignment began in 1838 in Lorient (Morbihan) where he worked at least until the mid-1840s (his son Charles Léon was born there in 1844). For 1853–54, he is mentioned as organist in Laval (Mayenne). He then moved to Paris where, from April 1855, he worked for many years as organist at Saint-Nicolas-des-Champs, Paris, succeeding fellow Alsatian François-Xavier Joseph Wackenthaler. There is no date of a retirement, but he composed music for the organ until 1889, which may roughly coincide with it.
He was the father of Charles Léon Hess (1844–1926), also a composer, among other works, of the opera Le Dîner de Pierrot, produced in 1893 at the Opéra-Comique, Paris.
Although J.-Ch. Hess wrote a number of works for organ and harmonium, which would reflect his profession as church organist, the main body of his music consists of light salon music for the piano. This in itself can be divided into original compositions and arrangements of popular melodies and arias from contemporary operas, the latter often in the form of a fantasia or of a theme and variations approach. Hess was a particularly prolific composer: the catalogue of his published compositions in the Bibliothèque nationale de France numbers more than 370.
Some of these pieces were eminently successful. In an obituary notice, the French journal Le Ménestrel – like most of Hess' music published by Heugel – wrote "They were truly popular and their print runs reached hundreds of thousands of copies" ("[Ils] furent véritablement populaires et leurs tirages montèrent à des centaines de mille d’exemplaires"). Among his most popular pieces were Où vas-tu, petit oiseau?, Op. 17 (1853, on a popular song by Léopold Amat), his fantasia Le Carnaval de Venise, Op. 43 (1857, on André Campra's opera of the same title), and Le Cor des Alpes, Op. 59 (1860, on a piece of the same title by Heinrich Proch).
Entries in reference works as "Jean Charles Hess" in: