Charles Delioux


Jean-Charles Delioux Savignac was a French composer, a pupil of Halévy and potentially Chopin, who was quite popular in the Paris salons of the nineteenth century.

Life

Charles Delioux was born in the Breton town of Lorient, Morbihan. He received his early musical education from his father, a local naval commissioner, and appeared as a child prodigy on the piano in Lorient and as early as 1839 at the Tuileries before King Louis Philippe. During his early years in Paris, he was a pupil of Pierre Zimmerman.
In 1845, he began his studies at the Paris Conservatory with Fromental Halévy and Auguste Barbereau and won an award in the same year for counterpoint and fugue. There are also hints that he studied privately with Frédéric Chopin as witnessed by his pupil Victor Gilles. He was admitted to compete for the Prix de Rome in 1847, but after he failed, he never re-entered. From 1849 he established himself as piano teacher in Paris and was so much sought after that he could support his wider family, after his father had died shortly before. Among his better known pupils was Alexis de Castillon. He was also quite successful as a composer, mainly for the piano, for which he published more than a hundred compositions. His taste and reputation led to becoming a jury member of competitions at the Conservatory.
Delioux died in Paris.

Music

Delioux's largest work was a comic opera, Yvonne et Loïc, produced in 1854 at the Théâtre du Gymnase. But he excelled as a composer of virtuoso piano music, transcriptions of classics, pedagogical works, and songs.
Marmontel described him thus: "Il se trouve à la fois parmi les élus du talent et parmi les préférées de la vogue. Ses compositions se distinguent par la franchise des idées, la netteté d'exposition, l'élégant contour des mélodies et la distinction des harmonies." Brown described Delioux's piano music as "brilliant and pretty, and well adapted for showy performance".

Selected compositions

Piano music