
Lucien Cailliet
Bio:The exceptional French-born American composer, arranger, conductor, and clarinettist, Lucien Cailliet (sometimes misspelled: Lucien Caillet), and studied at several French music conservatories before graduating from the Dijon Conservatory. He then studied with at the National Conservatory in Paris, graduating in 1913 with first prize on clarinet. He also studied composition privately with Paul Fauchet, Georges Caussades, Fugue with Andre Gedalge and orchestration and band arranging with Gabriel Pares who was then conductor of the Garde Republicaine Band. Lucien Cailliet gained experience as an instrumentalist and bandmaster in the French Army, and, in 1915, he toured the USA with the French Army Band. In 1915 (according to Baker's) or 1918 (according to Wikipedia & IMDB) he emigrated top the USA and in 1923, at age thirty-two, became a naturalised American citizen. In 1919 he joined the Philadelphia Orchestra as a clarinettist, bass clarinettist and saxophonist, and also was active with it as an arranger (several of his arrangements appear under Leopold Stokowski's cognomen, with the approval of Cailliet). In 1933, he performed Reynaldo Hahn's Sarabande et Theme on bass clarinet with Leopold Stokowski and the Philadelphia Orchestra. In 1935 (IMDB) or 1937 (MichlinMusic) he became Officier d'Academie, in France. He continued to play with the Philadelphia Orchestra under the direction of Leopold Stokowski and Eugene Ormandy until 1937, while attending graduate school at the Philadelphia Musical Academy, receiving his Doctor of Music Degree in 1937. He also taught at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia. During this time, he founded the Cherry Hill Wind Symphony, which would later become the Wind Symphony of Southern New Jersey. After receiving his doctorate, Lucien Cailliet move to California, where from 1938 to 1945 he taught orchestration, counterpoint and conducting at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles. He was also conductor of the Symphony Orchestra and Bands at the University. After teaching there for seven years, he decided to devote his time to guest conducting and composing film scores. Lucien Cailliet conducted the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo Orchestra, which functions involved guest-conducting the major symphony orchestras of Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, San Francisco Symphony Orchestra, Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra, Detroit Symphony Orchestra, Cleveland Orchestra , New Orleans, Philadelphia Orchestra, Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, etc. He was twice commissioned to compose and conduct the Finale number of the Tri-State Festival at Enid, Oklahoma. He has been a frequent conductor of many State Bands Festivals and Orchestras. He was a member of the Screen Composers Association, the Composers and Lyricists Guild of America, the American Bandmasters Association and of PHI KAPPA PHI. Lucien Cailliet served as Associate Conductor of The Allentown Band (Pennsylvania) from 1934 until 1969. During that period he conducted many of his arrangements on Allentown Band Concerts. In 1938 he dedicated his Variations on the Theme "Pop! Goes the Weasel" to The Allentown Band, an arrangement that continues to be a favourite or both bands and orchestras to this day. In the 1950's Lucien Cailliet lived in Kenosha, Wisconsin, where he served from 1957 to 1976 as Musical Director and Director of Music Publications of the musical instrument producer G. Leblanc Corporation, and Conductor of the Kenosha Symphony Orchestra through 1960. Cailliet was a personal friend and at one time a neighbour in Beverly Hills, California of José Iturbi, who appeared with Cailliet in symphony concerts. Works Lucien Cailliet wrote over 200 compositions for band, orchestra and chorus, published by many leading publishers of this country, and has been a member of ASCAP since 1946. He prepared a new orchestration of Mussorgsky's piano suite Pictures at an Exhibition (1937); among his original works were Memories of Stephen Foster for orchestra (1945), Variations on "Pop Goes the Weasel" for orchestra (1938), band music, and clarinet pieces. Lucien Cailliet is well known among wind musicians for his faithful arrangements of orchestral music for wind ensemble. In particular, his arrangements of Elsa's Procession to the Cathedral (from Wagner's opera Lohengrin) and Finlandia (a symphonic poem by Jean Sibelius) have become staples of the wind ensemble repertory. Lucien Cailliet also enjoyed a prolific career creating music for films. Between 1938 and 1965 he contributed to over 60 Hollywood films (principally of Paramount) as either composer (some 25 film scores to his credit) or arranger (some uncredited). Some of them he also conducted. Among the best known of these films are She Wore a Yellow Ribbon, The Ten Commandments (for which Elmer Bernstein wrote the score), and Gunfight at the O.K. Corral.
Titles:
- S746CB – Carnaval
- 1973 ST221 – Le Pionnier (The Pioneer)
- 1973 ST299 – Caprice Sentimental for Clarinet and Piano
- C51 – Caprice Sentimental for Clarinet Choir
- A45C – I Am Music
- SU565 – Fantasy and Fugue on “Oh Susanna”
- 1960 S747MB – Attention
- S512CB – Chorale and Variations
- 1972 SC54 – I Am Music
- 1959 SU374 – Fantaisie
- 1970 S499CB – The Spirit of Christmas
- 1973 ST740 – Theme and Variations
- S500CB – Homage to the U.S. Navy
- S753CB – I Am Music
- 1973 ST222CO – Clarinet Poem
- 1971 S754CB – Overture-Fanfare
- 1962 SU216 – Carnaval for Clarinet Choir
- 1973 ST899 – Fantaisie
Arrangements:
- S699CB – Overture for Band
- 1975 SU207 – Adagietto from “L’Arlesienne Suite No. 1”
- S397CB – Andante and Allegro (Clarinet, Oboe or Alto Sax solo)
- 1973 ST232 – Menuet
- 1973 ST23 – Eighth Solo, Op. 52 for Alto Saxophone and Piano
- 1967 S744CB – One Fine Day (Un Bel Di)
- 1975 SU205 – Chorale: Sleepers Awake
- 1969 A27C – Moment Musical
- 1969 SS792 – Andante and Allegro for Clarinet and Piano
- 1960 SU333 – Angelus
- 1993 S666CB – Romance in F
- 1999 S745CB – Musetta’s Waltz
- 1999 S751CB – Fervent Is My Longing/ Fugue in g Minor
- C43 – Finale
- 1972 SS984 – Eighth Solo, Op. 52 for Oboe and Piano
- 1973 SS996 – Andante and Allegro for Alto Saxophone and Piano
- 1969 S504CB – Le Roi D’ys
- 1962 SU473 – Flight Of the Bumble Bee for Alto Saxophone and Clarinet Choir
- 1999 SU395 – Difference Of Opinion (formerly C54)
- A46C – Mazurka
- 1962 SU517 – Romance in F for Horn or Alto Saxophone and Clarinet Choir
- 1962 ST192 – Marriage Of Figaro
- 1969 A28C – Fervent Is My Longing
- 1975 S740CB – Le Voltigeur
- 1968 B354302 – La Gazza Ladra (The Thieving Magpie) Overture
- 1998 S730 – Espana Rhapsody
- SU153CO – Ricercare
- 1969 A17C – Allegro