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  1. Sep 30, 2015 · Saint-Saëns actually wrote five symphonies, two of which (one in A and one in F major, the latter subtitled “Urbs Roma”) went unnumbered. The Symphony in E-flat, published in 1853 as his op. 2, was written between them, when its composer was at the ripe age of seventeen.

  2. As an organist in Paris, Camille Saint-Saëns held positions at Saint-Merri (1853–1858) and La Madeleine (1858–1877).

  3. Camille Saint-Saëns (1835-1921) Born in Paris. Taught the piano by his great-aunt Charlotte Masson, he began his composing career at the age of 7. He studied at the Paris Conservatory where his teachers included François Benoist for organ and Jacques Fromental Halévy for composition. During a long life he produced an enormous

  4. Saint-Saëns was just too good for his time and his countrymen. As his fame grew, so did some appreciation for his earlier efforts. A symphony he had written at age twenty three was finally published as his Symphony No. 2 in 1878, when Saint-Saëns was forty-two years old.

  5. Saint-Saëns wrote it for a competition in Bordeaux in the summer of 1856, intended to act as a springboard for young composers who would otherwise struggle to get their orchestral music before the public.

  6. In the Symphony #2, we find a more mature Camille Saint-Saëns exploring his symphonic abilities. While not exactly groundbreaking in terms of emotional or tonal development, there is less Mendelssohn here and more of the composer's own voice.

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  8. Jun 15, 2021 · Premiered in 1853, when Saint-Saëns was just 17, it’s music of breathtaking freshness and confidence, qualities Kantorow and his forces broadly intuit. Here, the first movement is played with purpose and color, while the Scherzo is radiant, carefree, and songful as one might hope.

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