Louis Grabu

{{Short description|Catalan-born French-trained composer and violinist}}

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Louis Grabu, Grabut, Grabue, or Grebus (fl. 1665 – 1690, died after 1693) was a Catalan-born, French-trained composer and violinist who was mainly active in England.

While he was probably born in Catalonia – he was later referred to as 'Lodovicus Grabeu of Shalon in Catalunnia'Peter Holman, Grove Music Online – details of his early life are lacking. Sometime in his youth he moved to Paris, where he was most likely trained by Lully. At the time of the Restoration he went to England, where French music, especially opera, was much in vogue.

Charles II of England appointed him as a composer for his own private music in 1665, and with the death of Nicholas Lanier in 1666 he became the second person to hold the title Master of the King's Musick. He adapted Robert Cambert's opera Ariadne for a London performance in 1674, and wrote music for John Dryden's Albion and Albanius in 1685.

In 1693 he left England, the only land where he had achieved any fame, and completely disappeared from the historical record.

Notes

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References

  • Peter Holman. "Grabu, Luis." In Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online, http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/grove/music/11564 (accessed August 3, 2009).

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{{succession box|title=Master of the King's Music|before=Nicholas Lanier|after=Nicholas Staggins|years=1666–1674}}

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Category:Baroque composers from Catalonia

Category:French male classical composers

Category:French Baroque composers

Category:17th-century French composers

Category:17th-century English composers

Category:English male composers

Category:Masters of the King's Music

Category:Year of death unknown

Category:Year of birth unknown

Category:Spanish male musicians

Category:17th-century male musicians

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