Composers

Charles-Édouard Lefebvre

Piano
Orchestra
Voice
Violin
Cello
Flute
Oboe
Viola
Mixed chorus
Clarinet
Romance
Piece
Religious music
Operas
Suite
Song
Caprice
Sacred oratorios
Oratorio
Quartet
by popularity

#

2 Pièces pour flûte, Op.722 Pièces pour le hautbois, Op.1026 Poésies

A

Andantino

B

BalladeBarcarolle, Op.121

C

Caprice, Op.106Cello Sonata, Op.98

D

Dalila, Op.40

E

Eloa, Op.70

F

Fantaisie-caprice, Op.118

H

Hymne

J

Judith, Op.31

L

La messe du Fantôme, Op.104Le trésor, Op.53

M

Méditation, Op.68

O

Offertoire

P

Piano Quintet, Op.50bisPsaume XXIII, Op.25

R

RomanceRomance for Horn and Piano, Op.30 No.1Romance sans paroles, Op.44 No.2Romance sans paroles, Op.94

S

String Quartet No.1, Op.80String Quartet No.2, Op.124Suite for String Quartet, Op.59Suite for Winds No.1, Op.57Suite for Winds No.2, Op.122

Z

Zaïre, Op.66
Wikipedia
Charles-Édouard Lefebvre (19 June 1843 – 8 September 1917) was a French composer.
Lefebvre was born in Paris, the son of painter Charles Lefebvre, and studied with Charles Gounod and Ambroise Thomas at the Paris Conservatoire. In 1870, he was awarded the Prix de Rome together with Henri Maréchal (1842–1924) for the cantata Le Jugement de Dieu. He was awarded the Prix Chartier for his compositions twice, in 1884 and 1891. In 1895 he succeeded Benjamin Godard as director of the Paris Conservatoire's chamber music class. According to Elaine Brody's entry on him in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (1980), "In his own words, he worked in pastels rather than oils." He died in Aix-les-Bains, Savoie, aged 74.