|
Definition of Charles Camille Saint-Saens
1. Noun. French pianist and composer (1835-1921).
Lexicographical Neighbors of Charles Camille Saint-Saens
Literary usage of Charles Camille Saint-Saens
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Great Italian and French Composers, Palestrina to Massenet by George Titus Ferris (1895)
"Charles Camille Saint-Saens, the oldest of the trio, was Paris-born, October 9,
1835, and, musician-like, indicated his remarkable endowment from the ..."
2. Handbook of the Operas by Edith Bertha Ordway (1917)
"Music by Charles Camille Saint-Saens. Book by Louis Gallet and the composer.
First production, Monte Carlo, 1911. The scene is ancient Greece in ..."
3. The Story of Organ Music by C[harles] F[rancis] Abdy Williams (1905)
"Amongst the most celebrated of living French organ composers are Charles Camille
Saint-Saens, born in 1835, ..."
4. A Complete History of Music, for Schools, Clubs, and Private Readings by Winton James Baltzell (1905)
"Charles-Camille Saint-Saens (Paris, France, 1835) witnessed the rise and fall of
Meyerbeer, and the triumphs of Gounod, and was himself famous before the ..."
5. Manual of Style: A Compilation of Typographical Rules Governing the by University of Chicago Press (1911)
"... preceding the hyphen, if French: Taylor, Henry Chandler- (for Henry
Chandler-Taylor); Saint- Saens, Charles Camille (for Charles Camille Saint-Saens ..."
6. Program of the Ann Arbor May Festival by University of Michigan University Musical Society, University of Michigan School of Music (1920)
"FREDERICK A. STOCK, Conductor Charles Camille Saint-Saens was born October 9,
1855, in Paris; died December 16, 1921, in Algiers. ..."