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First name: Jef van
Last name: Durme
Dates: 1907-1965
Category: Quartet
Nationality: Belgian
Opus name: Quartet (1943)
Publisher: CeBeDem
Peculiarities:
Information: Jef Van Durme came of a composers family from the Waas region (East Flanders). His father Jef gave the initial solfège and piano lessons to the boy, who during the First World War apprenticed himself to Firmin Karel Paermentier, organist at the main church of Sint-Niklaas. After the war the Van Durmes moved to Antwerp, where Jef Jr. was a pupil at St.-John Berchmans’ college (cf. grammar school). Meanwhile he also took lessons at the Antwerp Royal Flemish Conservatory. Upon obtaining a first prize for solfège with great distinction in 1923 as a student of Jan Broeckx, he discontinued his studies at the college in order to fully apply himself to music. At that time he was already composing small pieces in the style of Haydn and Mozart. At the conservatory he continued his music studies with Frans Lenaerts (piano), Lodewijk De Vocht (harmony) and Flor Alpaerts (counterpoint and fugue). In fact it was the latter who presented his student’s first orchestral works to the public. In the concert cycle of the Zoological Society he conducted Van Durme’s Romance for Violin and Orchestra in 1928 and a year later he created the symphonic poem Hamlet. Also in 1929 Van Durme won the Fester Prize with his violin sonata. With a view to broadening his horizon he moved to Paris for a while in 1931. There he got in touch with Arthur Honegger and Darius Milhaud and a grant enabled him for a number of weeks between December 1931 and February 1932 to take lessons in Vienna from Alban Berg. Returning home he went hard at it. He frequently performed as a pianist with a predilection for putting Chopin on his programme. Both his chamber music and his larger works attracted a great deal of attention. Concurrently Van Durme was in the pay of the NIR (National Radio) as modulator. That he continued this function until 1944 he will well have regretted indeed. Nowhere after the war did he get a turn, except for some temporary jobs in the field of education. As such in 1956 he was able to replace Jef Schampaert for some time as harmony teacher at the Antwerp conservatory. Only thanks to some work grants and the support of his family could he keep going. As a composer he came into the limelight again when in 1952 the province of East Flanders awarded a prize to his Breughelsymfonie (1942). It was Daniël Sternefeld, his former fellow-student at the conservatory, who created the symphony in 1953. Van Durme died at the age of 57 and left behind a rather limited œuvre, where the focus lies on chamber and orchestral music. © Studiecentrum voor Vlaamse Muziek vzw - Jan Dewilde (translation: Jo Sneppe)