Antoine Goléa


Antoine Goléa was a French musicologist of Romanian origin. He was one of the founding members of the Académie Charles-Cros.

Biography

Having been pushed by his father to become a violinist, Antoine Goléa entered the Conservatory of Bucharest at the age of nine, and studied violin under the guidance of Cecilia Nitzulescu, a brilliant and despotic "failed violinist", who initially believed in his talent. But, after nine years of study, they both have to face the facts: he was not made to be a virtuoso violinist, despite his undeniable gifts, in particular that of the "absolute pitch", and despite the first violin prize which crowned his long years of study. He was then eighteen years old. After three years at the French high school in Bucharest, his parents decided to send him to France to complete his secondary education. He arrived in Montpellier towards the end of the summer of 1928 and, having obtained his bachelor's degree in philosophy and a certificate of higher studies in German, he moved to Paris in October 1929, where he settled for the rest of his life.
Goléa was one of the first participants of the famous radio talk ' by Armand Panigel, launched in 1947 on RTF, alongside Claude Rostand, José Bruyr, and Henri Jacques. Other eminent critics later joined this Tribune, in particular Jacques Bourgeois and Jean Roy.
A columnist at Télérama Diapason, and
', he was one of the most important critics of contemporary music, known for his uncompromising stance and passionate defence of serial music, which he has long considered to be the only contemporary music worthy of interest. He also wrote a Histoire du ballet.
Towards the end of his life, however, Goléa was led to somewhat soften his positions. In the last published work of his lifetime, he must recognize that "an even more serious phenomenon has occurred: serial music died of his beautiful death..."
However, Goléa has always been an ardent defender of the music of Debussy, Messiaen, Schoenberg and Boulez, whom he considered to be the true creators of contemporary music, whereas, when asked what a Richard Strauss meant in the evolution of contemporary music, his answer was astounding: "Nothing, very exactly!
He was married to singer Colette Herzog. They are both buried at Cimetière parisien de Bagneux.

Quote

Excerpt from an article published in the journal Musica in 1956, and included in his biography Je suis un violoniste raté:

Publications