Jean Fournet (14 April 1913 – 3 November 2008) was a French flautist and conductor.
Biography
Fournet was born in Rouen in 1913. His father was a flutist who gave him some instruction on the flute and music theory. Fournet was then trained at the Conservatoire de Paris in flute by Gaston Blanquart and Marcel Moyse, and conducting by Philippe Gaubert (himself a flutist). He performed on the flute at age fifteen with the Orchestra of the Théâtre des Arts in Rouen. He first established himself as a conductor in his native country conducting in Rouen 1936-1940, Marseilles 1940-1944, and then as director of the Paris Opéra-Comique 1944-1957. He was also a professor of conducting at the École Normale de Musique de Paris 1944-1962. In 1949, and again in 1950, he was guest conductor with the Radio Éireann Symphony Orchestra.
His debut with the Concertgebouw Orchestra was in 1950. The Netherlands became Fournet’s second home. He became principal guest conductor of the Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra in Hilversum 1961-1968, where he also taught conducting. He married Miriam-Hannecart Jakes, an American who performed the Cor anglais with the Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra from 1977.
Fournet was also president of the jury of the Besançon International Conductor's Competition for many years.
He proved a welcome addition to opera companies in America, where the French style had become something of a lost art. Beyond stage work, he proved, both early and late, a persuasive interpreter of the French symphonic literature. He was known as a gentle perfectionist, rarely raising his voice in rehearsal. Jean Fournet's career extended over an extraordinarily long period. His final concert was conducted in January 2005, at age 91, with the Tokyo Metropolitan Symphony Orchestra. Following that concert he retired to his home in Weesp near Hilversum in the Netherlands, where he died in 2008, aged 95.
Recordings
Hector Berlioz: La damnation de Faust, Op. 24 - Chœurs Émile Passani et Grand Orchestre de Radio Paris et Fanfares, Mona Laurena, Georges Jouatte, Paul Cabanel, André Pactat - Columbia LFX 614-628 (78s), Columbia SL-110 (LPs) (1942)
Hector Berlioz: Grande Messe des Morts, Op. 5 Choeurs Emile Passani and Orchestra, Georges Jouatte - Columbia LFX 659-669 (78s), Columbia SL-159 (LPs) (1943)
Gabriel Pierné : Saint François d'Assise, L'An mille, François Giraudeau ( François), Lucien Lovano (Le Lépreux), Berthe Monnart (Claire), Freda Betti (Lucia), Raymond Amade, ténor, Bernard Demigny (Léon)/a, baryton/b, Choeurs de La RTF, Orchestre radio-symphonique de Paris, René Alix/a, Orchestre National de La RTF/b, conducted by Jean Fournet. 2 CD Solstice 2021 (recording a 1953, b 1964)
Hector Berlioz, La Mort d’Orphée (Monologue et Bacchanale), Scène Héroïque (La Révolution grecque), Le Cinq Mai (Chant sur la mort de l’Empereur Napoléon), L’Impériale (Cantate pour 2 chœurs). Dutch Radio Choir & Radio Symphony Orchestra, Gérard Garino, ténor, Rudd Van der Meer, basse, Lieuwe Visser, basse, conducted by Jean Fournet - CD Denon 1988 (concert live, 18/01/1987).
References
Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians, 2001.
"Le chef d'orchestre Jean Fournet est mort" Le Figaro, May 11, 2008.