Robert Casadesus was the quintessential French musician, a passionate perfectionist who carried the Gallic virtues of precision, clarity, and elegance into the mid-twentieth century as an embodiment of the living spirit of classicism -- precision animated by passion, clarity attained through sensuous scintillance, and elegance as the expression of the most lucidly aware animation. Born in Paris to a distinguished family of musicians -- his father and three uncles enjoyed careers as performers and composers --
Robert took first prize for piano at the Paris Conservatoire at age 14. Studies with
Louis Diémer -- early enthusiast of the French clavicenistes, premiere soloist and dedicatee of
Franck's Variations symphoniques for piano and orchestra -- graced
Casadesus with the mantle of the inheritor. In 1921 he married fellow
Diémer pupil Gabrielle (Gaby) L'Hôte. The following year he earned
Ravel's friendship with his performance of Gaspard de la nuit, which led to European tours with the composer and legendary soprano Madeleine Grey. "You are a composer,"
Ravel wrote, "because you have the courage to play 'Gibet' as I imagined it, that is, as a slow piece...And virtuoso pianists do not want to play it like that. They double the tempo and make it much faster. That is why I think you are a composer." Indeed,
Casadesus' catalog eventually embraced some 68 works, including seven symphonies, concertos for two and three pianos and orchestra, 27 chamber works, and 20 works for piano. It is music for connoisseurs, music of formal concision not devoid of passionate expression, but highly wrought, suggestive, and understated in, typically, lyrically attenuated slow movements, tender and strange, and conclusions of fastidious tumult. It is the antithesis of
Mahler's confessional expansiveness, while
Stravinsky's neo-Classical manner seems gimmicky and carnivalesque by comparison.
Casadesus was a distinguished teacher, beginning his career as professor of piano at the American Conservatory in Fontainebleau in 1921, and replacing Isidor Philipp as its head in 1935. But it is primarily as a touring pianist and recording artist that
Casadesus is remembered, appearing throughout Europe and the United States over 2,000 times in a career spanning half a century, often in duo-piano recitals with his wife. His authoritative, exhilarating recordings of the
Mozart piano concertos with
George Szell and the
Cleveland Orchestra, the
Beethoven violin sonatas and the
Franck Sonata with
Zino Francescatti,
Franck's Variations symphoniques and d'Indy's Symphonie cévenole with
Ormandy and the
Philadelphia Orchestra, and the piano works of
Ravel -- to name but the most prominent -- are among the very greatest.