Noëlie Pierront


Noëlie Pierront was a 20th-century French organist, concertist and music educator.

Biography

Born in the 6th arrondissement of Paris, Pierront started to study the pipe organ with Abel Decaux, Louis Vierne and Vincent d’Indy at the Schola Cantorum de Paris.
Subsequently, a student of Eugène Gigout and Marcel Dupré at the Conservatoire de Paris, where Olivier Messiaen, Jehan Alain, André Fleury, Maurice Duruflé, Jean Langlais and Gaston Litaize among others were her colleagues, she won its First Prize in organ in 1928.
She also worked the organ privately with André Marchal and musical composition with Guy de Lioncourt at the Schola Cantorum de Paris.
She was the organist at the Saint-Germain-des-Prés church from 1926 to 1928, then titular organist at the in Paris from 1929 to 1970.
Pierront taught at the Schola Cantorum de Paris from 1925 to 1932.
As a concertist, she gave the last recital before the War on the Willis organ at the Alexandra Palace on 20 August 1939.
She inaugurated the grand organ Danion-Gonzalez of the cathédrale Saint-Étienne de Limoges on 13 December 1963.

Dedications

dedicated to her his number 49 of Dominica XXI post Pentecosten of his Orgue Mystique Op. 57.
Jehan Alain dedicated his Aria for organ to her.

Publications

With Jean Bonfils, she is the author of:
N. Pierront et J. Bonfils in 10 volumes
She is also credited with numerous transcriptions and editions of organ music recordings at the Éditions musicales of the Schola Cantorum and the Procure générale de Musique, series Orgue et Liturgie, including an edition of the Livre d’orgue by De Grigny with Norbert Dufourcq in 1953.
Noëlie Pierront died in Paris on 25 September 1988.