Prix d'Europe
Encyclopedia
The Prix d'Europe is a prestigious Canadian study grant
that is funded by the Ministère des Affaires culturelles du Québec of the Government of Quebec
. Established in 1911, the award has been distributed annually to a single individual through competition with the exception of 1960-1973 and 2009 when there was a potential for 2 prizes each year and 1971 when no prize was given. Winners of the grant are given a cash prize towards furthering their musical education abroad in Europe. Past winners of the prize include a large number of notable Canadian musicians.
, and a plan by the school for the project was brought to Quebec premier Sir Lomer Gouin
for his personal approval. Gouin supported the project and through his influence the National Assembly of Quebec
passed a law promoting the development of musical art on 24 March 1911 which included funding the Prix d'Europe.
The Prix d'Europe initially awarded a cash prize of $3000 in 1911, at that time a very large sum of money. The sum was raised in 1959 ($5000), 1973 ($8000), and (1988). For more than the first 40 years of their history individual participants competed in their respective categories for a single prize. In 1960 two prizes were established: a prize for an a keyboardist or vocalist, and a prize for an orchestral instrumentalist or composer. Some years only one prize was given when the judges deemed there was not a suitable winner in a particular category. In 1974 the competition returned to its original state of offering just a single prize. In 2009 two prizes were given.
On two occasions the Prix d'Europe awarded special grants to individuals: in 1924 to violinist Norman Herschorn and in 1926 to pianist Alice Ste-Marie. The 1938 winner of the competition, Marcel Hébert, drowned before he could avail himself of the grant awarded to him. Accordingly his grant was distributed to two other participants in that year's competition: Noël Brunet and Georges Savaria
. No prize was given in 1971 as the judges felt that no applicant had demonstrated a sufficient enough level of skill to have earned the prize.
, piano
1912 Léo-Pol Morin
, piano
1913 Omer Létourneau
, organ
1914 Jean Dansereau, piano
1915 Wilfrid Pelletier
, piano
1916 Graziella Dumaine, voice
1917 Germaine Malépart, piano
1918 Jean Kaster, cello
1919 Lucille Dompierre
, piano
1920 Ruth Pryce, violin
1921 Auguste Descarries, piano
1922 Anna-Marie Messénie, piano
1923 Conrad Bernier, organ
1924 Gabriel Cusson
, cello
1925 Paul Doyon, piano
1926 Lionel Daunais
, voice
1927 Rita Savard, piano; Henri Mercure, composition
1928 Brahm Sand, cello
1929 Jean-Marie Beaudet
, organ
1930 Gilberte Martin, piano
1931 Lucien Martin
, violin
1932 Bernard Piché, organ
1933 Edwin Bélanger
, violin
1934 Georges Lindsay, organ
1935 Georgette Tremblay, organ
1936 Noël Brunet, violin
1937 Georges Savaria
, piano
1938 Marcel Hébert, piano
1939 Paule-Aimée Bailly, piano
1940 Suzette Forgues, cello
1941 Marcelle Martin, organ
1942 Claude Lavoie, organ
1943 Berthe Dorval, piano
1944 Jacqueline Lavoy, piano
1945 Claude Létourneau, violin
1946 Jeanne Landry, piano
1947 Lise DesRosiers, piano
1948 Raymond Daveluy
, organ
1949 Clermont Pépin
, piano
1950 Josephte Dufresne, piano
1951 Anna-Marie Globenski, piano
1952 Janine Lachance, piano
1953 Kenneth Gilbert
, organ
1954 Monik Grenier, piano
1955 Léon Bernier, piano
1956 Monique Munger, piano
1957 Jean Leduc, organ
1958 Lise Boucher, piano
1959 Rachel Martel, piano
1961 Jacques Hétu
, composition; Pierre Ménard, violin
1962 Colette Boky
, voice; John McKay
, piano
1963 Cécile Lanneville, cello; André Prévost, composition
1964 Claude Ouellet, voice; Claude Savard, piano
1965 Alain Gagnon
, composition
1966 Monique Gendron
, organ; Bruno Laplante, voice
1967 Micheline Coulombe Saint-Marcoux
, composition; Jacques Larocque
, saxophone
1968 Roland Richard, voice; Lucie Madden, organ
1969 Louise LeComte, recorder
1970 John Whitelaw
, harpsichord
1971 not awarded
1972 Marie Laferrière, voice; Karen Quinton
, piano
1973 Raynald Arseneault
, composition; Marcel Saint-Jacques, flute
1975 Denis Bédard
, harpsichord
1976 Robert Langevin
, flute
1977 Michel Franck, piano
1978 Gilles Carpentier, clarinet
1979 Chantal Juillet
, violin
1980 Marie-Danielle Parent, voice
1981 Jacques Després, piano
1982 Johanne Perron, cello
1983 Sophie Rolland, cello
1984 Violaine Melançon, violin
1985 Éric Trudel, piano
1986 Jean Saulnier, piano
1987 Philippe Magnan, oboe
1988 Brigitte Rolland
, violin
1989 Claude Labelle, piano
1990 Marie-Claude Bilodeau, piano
1991 Stéphane Rancourt, oboe
1992 Guylaine Flamand, piano
1993 Pascale Giguère, violin
1994 Mark Freiheit, piano
1995 Stéphan Sylvestre, piano
1996 Frédéric Bednarz, violin
1997 Olivier Thouin
, violin
1998 Mariane Patenaude, piano
1999 Benoit Loiselle, cello
2000 Catherine Meunier, percussion
2001 Manelli Pirzadeh, piano
2002 Vincent Boucher, organ
2003 Wonny Song
, piano
2004 Anne-Julie Caron, percussion
2005 Jocelyne Roy, flute
2006 Jean-Sébastien Roy, violin
2007 Caroline Chéhadé, violin
2008 Valérie Milot
, harp
2009 Marie-Eve Poupart, violin and Maxime McKinley, composition
2010 Tristan Longval-Gagné, piano
2011 Charles Richard-Hamelin, piano and Gabriel Dharmoo, composition
Grant (money)
Grants are funds disbursed by one party , often a Government Department, Corporation, Foundation or Trust, to a recipient, often a nonprofit entity, educational institution, business or an individual. In order to receive a grant, some form of "Grant Writing" often referred to as either a proposal...
that is funded by the Ministère des Affaires culturelles du Québec of the Government of Quebec
Government of Quebec
The Government of Quebec refers to the provincial government of the province of Quebec. Its powers and structure are set out in the Constitution Act, 1867....
. Established in 1911, the award has been distributed annually to a single individual through competition with the exception of 1960-1973 and 2009 when there was a potential for 2 prizes each year and 1971 when no prize was given. Winners of the grant are given a cash prize towards furthering their musical education abroad in Europe. Past winners of the prize include a large number of notable Canadian musicians.
History
J.-Arthur Paquet, a Quebecian businessman and organist who was treasurer of the Académie de musique du Québec, was responsible for spearheading the grant's creation in 1911. Paquet gained the support of the academy's board and its secretary, Joseph-Arthur BernierJoseph-Arthur Bernier
Joseph-Arthur Bernier was a Canadian organist, pianist, composer, and music educator. Born in Lévis, Quebec, he was the senior member of a prominent family of musicians from Quebec City...
, and a plan by the school for the project was brought to Quebec premier Sir Lomer Gouin
Lomer Gouin
Sir Jean Lomer Gouin, PC, KCMG was a Canadian politician.-Biography:He was born in Grondines, Quebec and served as 13th Premier of the Canadian province of Quebec, as a Cabinet minister in the federal government of Canada, and as the 15th Lieutenant Governor of Quebec.On May 24, 1888, he married...
for his personal approval. Gouin supported the project and through his influence the National Assembly of Quebec
National Assembly of Quebec
The National Assembly of Quebec is the legislative body of the Province of Quebec. The Lieutenant Governor and the National Assembly compose the Parliament of Quebec, which operates in a fashion similar to those of other British-style parliamentary systems.The National Assembly was formerly the...
passed a law promoting the development of musical art on 24 March 1911 which included funding the Prix d'Europe.
The Prix d'Europe initially awarded a cash prize of $3000 in 1911, at that time a very large sum of money. The sum was raised in 1959 ($5000), 1973 ($8000), and (1988). For more than the first 40 years of their history individual participants competed in their respective categories for a single prize. In 1960 two prizes were established: a prize for an a keyboardist or vocalist, and a prize for an orchestral instrumentalist or composer. Some years only one prize was given when the judges deemed there was not a suitable winner in a particular category. In 1974 the competition returned to its original state of offering just a single prize. In 2009 two prizes were given.
On two occasions the Prix d'Europe awarded special grants to individuals: in 1924 to violinist Norman Herschorn and in 1926 to pianist Alice Ste-Marie. The 1938 winner of the competition, Marcel Hébert, drowned before he could avail himself of the grant awarded to him. Accordingly his grant was distributed to two other participants in that year's competition: Noël Brunet and Georges Savaria
Georges Savaria
Georges Savaria is a Canadian pianist, composer, ondist, college administrator, and music educator. His compositional output consists of a 1951 piano concerto, several songs and works for solo piano, and music for theatre, television, and radio...
. No prize was given in 1971 as the judges felt that no applicant had demonstrated a sufficient enough level of skill to have earned the prize.
1911-1959
1911 Clotilde CoulombeClotilde Coulombe
Clotilde Coulombe was a Canadian pianist and Roman Catholic nun. She was the sister-in-law of musician Omer Létourneau.-Life and career:...
, piano
1912 Léo-Pol Morin
Léo-Pol Morin
Léo-Pol Morin was a Canadian pianist, music critic, composer, and music educator. He composed under the name James Callihou, with his most well known works being Suite canadienne and Three Eskimos for piano. He also composed works based on Canadian and Inuit folklore/folk music and harmonized a...
, piano
1913 Omer Létourneau
Omer Létourneau
Omer Létourneau was a Québécois pianist, organist, composer and orchestra conductor.A pupil of Joseph-Arthur Bernier, Létourneau won the Prix d'Europe in 1913. In 1917 he directed the production of L'Accordée de village in the Auditorium de Québec in Quebec City which included performances from...
, organ
1914 Jean Dansereau, piano
1915 Wilfrid Pelletier
Wilfrid Pelletier
Joseph Louis Wilfrid Pelletier , CC was a Canadian conductor, pianist, composer, and arts administrator. He was instrumental in establishing the Montreal Symphony Orchestra, serving as the orchestra's first artistic director and conductor from 1935-1941...
, piano
1916 Graziella Dumaine, voice
1917 Germaine Malépart, piano
1918 Jean Kaster, cello
1919 Lucille Dompierre
Lucille Dompierre
Lucille Dompierre was a Canadian pianist and arranger. She made only a few recordings, mainly consisting of works by Frédéric Chopin. She also arranged several Canadian songs and folk tunes for piano and solo voice.-Career:...
, piano
1920 Ruth Pryce, violin
1921 Auguste Descarries, piano
1922 Anna-Marie Messénie, piano
1923 Conrad Bernier, organ
1924 Gabriel Cusson
Gabriel Cusson
Gabriel Cusson was a Canadian composer and music educator. As a composer, his music was heavily influenced by the style of early 20th century French composers...
, cello
1925 Paul Doyon, piano
1926 Lionel Daunais
Lionel Daunais
Noël Ferdinand Lionel Daunais, was a French Canadian baritone and composer.Born in Montreal, Quebec, Daunais studied singing with Céline Marier and harmony and composition with Oscar O'Brien. In 1923 he won first prize at the Montreal Musical Festival...
, voice
1927 Rita Savard, piano; Henri Mercure, composition
1928 Brahm Sand, cello
1929 Jean-Marie Beaudet
Jean-Marie Beaudet
Jean-Marie Beaudet was a Canadian conductor, organist, pianist, radio producer, and music educator. He had a long career with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, serving variously as a music producer, programing director, conductor, and administrator...
, organ
1930 Gilberte Martin, piano
1931 Lucien Martin
Lucien Martin
Lucien Martin was a Canadian violinist, conductor, and composer. Only one of his compositions was published, the art song La Chanson des belles, which was performed by Jeanne Desjardins in its premiere on the CBC Radio program Sérénade pour cordes.-Life and career:Born in Montreal, Martin was the...
, violin
1932 Bernard Piché, organ
1933 Edwin Bélanger
Edwin Bélanger
Edwin Bélanger was a Canadian conductor, violinist, violist, arranger, and music educator. He had an association with the Orchestre Symphonique de Québec for more than 50 years, including serving as the orchestra's principal conductor from 1942 to 1951.-Education:Born in Montmagny, Quebec,...
, violin
1934 Georges Lindsay, organ
1935 Georgette Tremblay, organ
1936 Noël Brunet, violin
1937 Georges Savaria
Georges Savaria
Georges Savaria is a Canadian pianist, composer, ondist, college administrator, and music educator. His compositional output consists of a 1951 piano concerto, several songs and works for solo piano, and music for theatre, television, and radio...
, piano
1938 Marcel Hébert, piano
1939 Paule-Aimée Bailly, piano
1940 Suzette Forgues, cello
1941 Marcelle Martin, organ
1942 Claude Lavoie, organ
1943 Berthe Dorval, piano
1944 Jacqueline Lavoy, piano
1945 Claude Létourneau, violin
1946 Jeanne Landry, piano
1947 Lise DesRosiers, piano
1948 Raymond Daveluy
Raymond Daveluy
Joseph Eugène Raymond-Marie Daveluy is a Canadian composer, organist, music educator, and arts administrator. An associate composer of the Canadian Music Centre, his compositional output consists mainly of works for solo organ. He had an active international career as a recitalist and concert...
, organ
1949 Clermont Pépin
Clermont Pépin
Clermont Pépin, was a Canadian pianist, composer and teacher.He was born Jean Joseph Clermont Pépin in Saint-Georges, Quebec in 1926. Pépin studied with influential Canadian composers Claude Champagne and Arnold Walter , and at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia from 1941 to 1944 with...
, piano
1950 Josephte Dufresne, piano
1951 Anna-Marie Globenski, piano
1952 Janine Lachance, piano
1953 Kenneth Gilbert
Kenneth Gilbert
Kenneth Gilbert, OC is a Canadian harpsichordist, organist, musicologist and music educator.Gilbert was trained at the Conservatoire de musique du Québec à Montréal where he was a pupil of Yvonne Hubert and Gabriel Cusson . He also studied the organ privately with Conrad Letendre in Montréal...
, organ
1954 Monik Grenier, piano
1955 Léon Bernier, piano
1956 Monique Munger, piano
1957 Jean Leduc, organ
1958 Lise Boucher, piano
1959 Rachel Martel, piano
1960-1973
1960 Jacqueline Martel, voice; Gisèle Daoust, piano1961 Jacques Hétu
Jacques Hétu
Jacques Hétu, OC was a Canadian composer and music educator from Trois-Rivières, Quebec. He was nominated for a 1989 Juno Award in the Best Classical Composition category...
, composition; Pierre Ménard, violin
1962 Colette Boky
Colette Boky
Colette Boky is a French-Canadian operatic soprano, particularly associated with lyric roles in the French, Italian, and German repertories.- Life and career :...
, voice; John McKay
John McKay (pianist)
John McKay is an American pianist and music educator of Canadian birth. He has performed in concerts, recitals, and on radio and television broadcasts throughout North America and Europe...
, piano
1963 Cécile Lanneville, cello; André Prévost, composition
1964 Claude Ouellet, voice; Claude Savard, piano
1965 Alain Gagnon
Alain Gagnon
Alain Gagnon is a Canadian composer and music educator. He joined the music faculty of the Université Laval in 1967 where he has taught music theory, music analysis, and music composition for more than 40 years. A member of the Canadian League of Composers and an associate of the Canadian Music...
, composition
1966 Monique Gendron
Monique Gendron
Monique Gendron is a Canadian organist of international renown. She won first prize at the St Albans International Organ Festival in England and at the Grand Prix of Chartes in France. She has recorded sonatas by Johann Sebastian Bach and George Frideric Handel with oboist Bernard Jean and has...
, organ; Bruno Laplante, voice
1967 Micheline Coulombe Saint-Marcoux
Micheline Coulombe Saint-Marcoux
Micheline Coulombe Saint-Marcoux was a Canadian composer and music educator who played an important role in the contemporary classical music scene of Canada and France from the late 1960s through the mid 1980s...
, composition; Jacques Larocque
Jacques Larocque
Jacques Larocque is a Canadian saxophonist, arranger, music educator, and university administrator. He has authored and published numerous transcriptions and arrangements for saxophone quartet; some of which have been recorded by ensembles like the Alliage Saxophone Quartet and the American...
, saxophone
1968 Roland Richard, voice; Lucie Madden, organ
1969 Louise LeComte, recorder
1970 John Whitelaw
John Whitelaw (harpsichord)
John Whitelaw is an American harpsichordist and long time faculty member of the Royal Conservatory in Ghent. After studies in Chicago, he was a student of Kenneth Gilbert in Montreal from 1967-1971. In 1970 he won the Prix d'Europe...
, harpsichord
1971 not awarded
1972 Marie Laferrière, voice; Karen Quinton
Karen Quinton
Karen Quinton is a Toronto-based Canadian pianist, organist, harpsichordist and music educator. She has performed as a soloist with many symphony orchestras in Canada, including the Toronto Symphony Orchestra and the Hamilton Philharmonic Orchestra. She has given recital tours throughout North...
, piano
1973 Raynald Arseneault
Raynald Arseneault
Raynald Arseneault was a Canadian composer and organist. An associate of the Canadian Music Centre, his compositional output consists of more than 50 works. His style was particularly influenced by Ivan Wyschnegradsky and Giacinto Scelsi; both of whom he met with in Europe during the 1970s...
, composition; Marcel Saint-Jacques, flute
1974-present
1974 Jacinthe Couture, piano1975 Denis Bédard
Denis Bédard
Denis Bédard is a Canadian composer of organ works and choral pieces...
, harpsichord
1976 Robert Langevin
Robert Langevin
Robert Langevin is a Canadian flautist. He has been principal flute of the New York Philharmonic since 2000 and is a former principal flutist of the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra. He was associate principal flute with the Montreal Symphony Orchestra for 13 years and can be heard on more than 30...
, flute
1977 Michel Franck, piano
1978 Gilles Carpentier, clarinet
1979 Chantal Juillet
Chantal Juillet
Chantal Juillet, is a Canadian violinist.Born in Montreal, Juillet won all the major Canadian music competitions in her category by the age of 16 and was launched into international renown when she received First Prize at the Young Concert Artists International Auditions in New York City. In 1979...
, violin
1980 Marie-Danielle Parent, voice
1981 Jacques Després, piano
1982 Johanne Perron, cello
1983 Sophie Rolland, cello
1984 Violaine Melançon, violin
1985 Éric Trudel, piano
1986 Jean Saulnier, piano
1987 Philippe Magnan, oboe
1988 Brigitte Rolland
Brigitte Rolland
Brigitte Rolland is a Canadian violinist. In 1988 she won the Prix d'Europe and was placed second in the London Philharmonic Orchestra Competition. She has appeared as a soloist in concerts with the CBC Quebec Chamber Orchestra, I Musici de Montréal, the Orchestre des jeunes du Québec, and the RCM...
, violin
1989 Claude Labelle, piano
1990 Marie-Claude Bilodeau, piano
1991 Stéphane Rancourt, oboe
1992 Guylaine Flamand, piano
1993 Pascale Giguère, violin
1994 Mark Freiheit, piano
1995 Stéphan Sylvestre, piano
1996 Frédéric Bednarz, violin
1997 Olivier Thouin
Olivier Thouin
Olivier Thouin is a Canadian violinist. He has performed as a soloist with several leading symphony orchestras in Canada, including the Orchestre Métropolitain du Grand Montréal, Les Violons du Roy, and the Montreal Symphony Orchestra...
, violin
1998 Mariane Patenaude, piano
1999 Benoit Loiselle, cello
2000 Catherine Meunier, percussion
2001 Manelli Pirzadeh, piano
2002 Vincent Boucher, organ
2003 Wonny Song
Wonny Song
-See also:* Pianists* Canadian classical music* Young Concert Artists-External links:* * * * at Zankel Hall, from The New York Times...
, piano
2004 Anne-Julie Caron, percussion
2005 Jocelyne Roy, flute
2006 Jean-Sébastien Roy, violin
2007 Caroline Chéhadé, violin
2008 Valérie Milot
Valérie Milot
Valérie Milot is a Canadian harpist born in the province of Quebec. In 2008, she became the first harpist to win the prestigious Prix d’Europe . Ms Milot is renowned for her mature musical instinct as well as for the strength and the refinement of her interpretations...
, harp
2009 Marie-Eve Poupart, violin and Maxime McKinley, composition
2010 Tristan Longval-Gagné, piano
2011 Charles Richard-Hamelin, piano and Gabriel Dharmoo, composition