André Tubeuf


André Tubeuf is a French writer, philosopher and music critic.

Biography

Training

A condisciple in Beirut of Salah Stétié and, Tubeuf came to Paris after the war and performed his khâgne at the lycee Louis-le-Grand, where he joined Dominique Fernandez, Michel Deguy, Jacques Derrida and his cousin Pierre-Jean Rémy.
In 1950, Tubeuf was received at the École normale supérieure,, where he first followed the teaching of Michel Alexandre, himself a pupil of Alain, then that of Louis Althusser and Maurice Merleau-Ponty, and enjoyed a friendship with Gérard Granel.
In 1951, with Maurice Clavel, he translated Electra by Sophocles for Silvia Monfort.
An agrégé in philosophy, he taught this subject in philosophy class and then in Classes préparatoires littéraires at the lycée Fustel-de-Coulanges in Strasbourg, from 1957 to 1992.
In 1972, he joined the Ministry of Culture in the cabinet of, to deal with musical matters; He pursued this experience in 1975 in the office of.

Writer

From 1976, he mainly collaborated with the magazine Le Point, but also at Avant Scène Opéra, Harmonie and Lyrica, then Diapason and finally Classica. In addition, he made countless lectures and as many radio broadcasts.
After Romain Rolland, André Suarès and Vladimir Jankélévitch, of whom he was the pupil, he renewed the genre of musical literature in France, escaping the novelistic genre, without falling into musicology.
In addition to his essays on Mozart, Ludwig van Beethoven, Richard Wagner, Giuseppe Verdi, Richard Strauss and the lied, Tubeuf wrote among the best portraits of his friends Elisabeth Schwarzkopf, Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau, Claudio Arrau, Hans Hotter, Rudolf Serkin, Arthur Rubinstein, Régine Crespin, Daniel Barenboim, Hélène Grimaud and Cecilia Bartoli.

Honours