thumb|right|200px|Schola Cantorum

The Schola Cantorum de Paris ( being ) is a private music conservatory located in the Latin Quarter of Paris. It was founded in 1894 by Charles Bordes, Alexandre Guilmant and Vincent d'Indy as a counterbalance to the Paris Conservatoire's emphasis on opera.

History

The Schola was founded in 1894 and opened on 15 October 1896 as a rival to the Paris Conservatoire. Alexandre Guilmant, an organist at the Conservatoire, was the director of the Schola before d'Indy took over. D'Indy set the curriculum, which fostered the study of late Baroque and early Classical works, Gregorian chant, and Renaissance polyphony. According to the Oxford Companion to Music, "A solid grounding in technique was encouraged, rather than originality, and the only graduates who could stand comparison with the best Conservatoire students were Magnard, Roussel, Déodat de Séverac, and Pierre de Bréville." The school was originally located in Montparnasse; in 1900 it moved to its present site, a former convent in the Quartier Latin.

  • Léon Barzin
  • Antoine Geoffroy-Dechaume
  • Wanda Landowska
  • Jean Langlais
  • Darius Milhaud
  • Albert Roussel

Alumni

In addition to those mentioned above, students, not all full-time, have included:

  • Joseph Canteloube
  • Helen Eugenia Hagan (African American)
  • Anne Terrier Laffaille
  • John Jacob Niles (Kentucky)
  • Cole Porter (for a few months in 1920) (Indiana)
  • Georgios Poniridis
  • Theodor Rogalski (Romania)
  • Yvonne Rokseth
  • Félix Raugel
  • Dulce María Serret
  • Erik Satie (as a mature student)
  • Joaquin Turina (Spain)
  • Edgard Varèse
  • Congyu Wang (Singapore)

Notes

  • Schola Cantorum website
  • Schola Cantorum de Paris on the French-language Wikipedia