The Life and Music of Camille Saint-Saens
The Life and Music of Camille Saint-Saens
The Life and Music of Camille Saint-Saens
Alysa M. Hershman
July 2, 2022
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History
Camille Saint-Saens was born on October 9, 1835 in Paris, France and died on December
16, 1921 in Algiers, Algeria. His full name was Charles Camille Saint-Saens, but he went by
Camille. He was raised by his widowed mother and her aunt who introduced him to the piano
and gave him his first lessons. Like Mozart, Saint-Saens was a child prodigy on the piano. He
demonstrated perfect pitch by the age of two, could pick out tunes on the piano when he was two
and a half, composed his first piece at the age of three, and performed in his first piano recital at
the age of five. When he was ten, he made his public debut and offered to play any one of
Beethoven’s 32 sonatas from memory. He wrote his first symphony at the age of 16 and went on
to write more.
Saint-Saens went to the Paris Conservatory in the late 1840s where he studied organ and
composition and won many top prizes. His Symphony No. 1 was performed in 1855 and he
became organist at the Church of the Madeleine in Paris in 1857. He was the organist at the
church for 20 years of his life. He was professor of piano at the Niedermeyer School from 1861
to 1865. His students included Gabriel Faure and Andre Messager. Faure was one of his favorite
students and ended up being a good friend of his. In 1870, Saint-Saens was enlisted into the
National Guard to fight in the Franco-Prussian War. After the Franco-Prussian War ended in
1871, he co-founded the Societe Nationale de Musique (National Society of Music), which gave
performances of significant French orchestral works. That same year, he produced his first
symphonic poem, Le Rouet d’Omphale. He was the first person from France to write that genre
of music. His opera Samson et Dalila was performed at Weimar in 1877 and was staged in Paris
Saint-Saens married Marie Emile Truffot in 1875 when he was 40 years old. They had
two sons. Sadly, in 1878, Saint-Saens lost both of his sons within six weeks of each other. The
first died from illness and the second fell from a window. He separated from his wife three years
later. In the years following, he took tours throughout The United States, Europe, South
America, the Middle East, and East Asia performing his compositions. From approximately 1880
to the end of his life, he wrote compositions that covered all types of dramatic and instrumental
music. In 1886, he wrote his Symphony No. 3 and Le Carnaval des Animaux (The Carnival of the
Animals), which are two of his most notable pieces. That same year, Vincent d’Indy and his
allies had Saint-Saens removed from the Societe Nationale de Musique. In 1888, his mother died,
which drove him away from France. Over the next several years he travelled the world and
visited exotic locations in Europe, North Africa, Southeast Asia, and South America. He
continued to write on musical, scientific, and historical topics during his travels and spent his last
years in Algiers, Algeria. The best of his final works includes Piano Concerto No. 5 (1895) and
Camille Saint-Saens was a conductor, critic, music scholar, teacher and composer. He
was noteworthy for his pioneering efforts on behalf of French music. Saint-Saens was a gifted
pianist and organist. Although he strongly opposed and criticized Richard Wagner’s music,
Wagner really admired Saint-Saens for his brilliant piano technique. Marcel Proust, a remarkable
French novelist, critic, and essay writer, used Saint-Saens as a subject in his study. Saint-Saens’s
intellect was not limited to music. He had an intense knowledge and interest in geology,
archaeology, math, botany, and butterflies. He enjoyed engaging in conversations with some of
Europe’s best scientists and wrote many academic articles about acoustics in music, supernatural
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sciences, Roman theatre decoration, and ancient instruments. He wrote a philosophical work,
Problemes et Mysteres, which discussed how science and art were replacing religion. He also
was a member of the Astronomical Society of France in which he gave lectures on mirages,
created a telescope, and planned concerts to correspond with various astronomical events. Along
Saint-Saens was not on good terms with all of his contemporaries. He openly despised
and criticized many of his fellow composers in France such as Franck, d’Indy, and Jules
Massenet. He especially did not get along with Claude Debussy who once stated, “ I have a
horror of sentimentality and cannot forget that its name is Saint-Saens.” Saint-Saens learned
from Richard Wagner in France and amazed Wagner himself when he sight-read entire opera
orchestral scores. Although he admitted having appreciation for Wagner’s music, he defiantly
stated that he was not a fan and openly criticized his works. In 1913, Saint-Saens famously
stormed out of the premier of Igor Stravinsky’s Le Sacre du printemps (The Rite of Spring)
because he was allegedly furious over the misuse of the bass. One composer he did get along
with and went on to become close friends with was Franz Liszt, a Hungarian composer, pianist,
and teacher of the Romantic era. Liszt described Saint-Saens as the finest organist in the world.
He also became friends with Hector Berlioz, a French Romantic composer and conductor, and
Gabriel Faure, a French composer, organist, pianist and teacher. He liked good company, but
also liked to be alone. He mentioned in an interview with Klein (1922), “There are times when I
feel that I must have solitude – to be alone and think and dream; above all, to work just when the
humour takes me. I like good company, but I like hard work still better.”
When Saint-Saens was nearing the end of his life, he undertook a tour of America but
found that his style of composition was no longer regarded as being modern by the Parisian
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classes. He died of pneumonia on December 16, 1921 in Algiers and was buried at the Cimetiere
du Montparnasse, the same Paris cemetery as his fellow composers Chabrier, Auric, and Franck.
His passing occurred nine weeks after celebrating his 86th birthday.
Music Style
Camille Saint-Saens composed during the Romantic period. The Romantic period started
around 1830 and ended around 1900. Romantic music came into its own at the beginning of the
19th century. Music from this era sounds almost boundless and free from limitations of form.
Much of this music is programmatic. It is meant to describe something, perhaps a scene in nature
or a particular feeling. He lived through a period of Wagner’s influence, but remained unaffected
by it. He adhered to the classical models and kept a conservative ideal of French music that
emphasized polished craftmanship and a sense of form. In his memoirs, he described the
contemporary musical scene in a shrewd and ironic manner. He considered the music of Bach
and Mozart to be supreme and all-sufficient as they never sacrificed form to expression.
Saint-Saens was regarded by his contemporaries as writing music that was elegant and
technically flawless, but sometimes sounded uninspired and lacked emotion. His performance
style was described as subtle, restrained, and cool. He was one of the first pianists to experiment
with recordings, and was the earliest-born pianist to ever make a recording of his work. His
works have been labeled as clean, polished, and professional. His concertos and chamber music
pieces are technically difficult and his later chamber music pieces are less accessible to a listener
than his earlier ones. They were composed when Saint-Saens was becoming less popular and are
Although Saint-Saens was considered old-fashioned later in his life, he did explore new
forms and reimagined older ones. He was a forerunner of the neoclassicism of Ravel. He was an
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exceptional pianist and his playing exhibited even scales, quick speed, and refinement. Saint-
Saens was not as charismatic as other performers of his time and often sat unmoved at his piano.
His concertos seem to have influenced those of Sergei Rachmaninoff, a Russian composer,
virtuoso pianist, and conductor, and other composers of the late Romantic period. He was often
named “the most German of all the French composers,” likely because of his use of counterpoint.
His Works
During his long career, Camille Saint-Saens composed over 300 works. He wrote music for
many different types of instruments and ensembles including piano solos (original works), piano
solos (arrangements of other composers’ works), piano duets, piano trios, piano quartets, piano
quintets, organ music, chamber music, violin and piano, cello and piano, bassoon and piano,
clarinet and piano, string quartet, orchestra, symphonies, symphonic poems, piano and orchestra,
violin and orchestra, cello and orchestra, choral, sacred, secular, oratorios, and operas, and film
music. He wrote many dramatic works, including four symphonic poems and 13 operas. While
he did write operas, none were very popular. He was the first major composer to write music for
the cinema. In 1908 he wrote the score for an 18-minute-long motion picture, ‘The Assassination
of the Duke of Guise.’ Saint-Saints wrote five symphonies, five piano concertos, three violin
concertos, two cello concertos and about 20 concertante works for soloists and orchestra. He also
wrote six preludes and fugues for organ, the most performed of which is the Prelude and Fugue
in E flat major.
In 1886 when Saint-Saens was 51 years old, he wrote his final symphony and one of his best-
known works, the Symphony No. 3 ‘Organ’. Of his concerti and symphonies, this is the most
frequently performed. He dedicated it to his friend, Franz Liszt, who died that same year. It was
famously used as the main theme in the 1995 film Babe and its sequel, Babe: Pig in the City;
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commissioned by the Royal Philharmonic Society in the UK. This same year, he completed Le
Carnaval des Animaux (The Carnival of the Animals). Carnival of the Animals was originally
written as a joke and Saint-Saens worried it would damage his reputation as a serious composer.
He banned performances of it and only allowed one movement, Le Cygne (The Swan), a piece
for cello and two pianos, to be published while he was alive. The piece became known
worldwide as The Dying Swan after 1905 when someone choreographed it for legendary
ballerina Anna Pavlov, who performed the piece approximately 4,000 times. Since the
publication of The Carnival of the Animals, the imagination and brilliance of his work has
His best-known works are several concertos, an organ symphony and Le Carnaval des
Animaux (The Carnaval of the Animals). Of his symphonic poems, Le Rouet d’Omphale (The
Spinning Wheel of Omphale) and Danse macabre (Dance of Death), are the most notable and
most often performed. Le Rouet d’Omphale illustrates a spinning wheel. Omphale is associated
with Hercules and the piece describes how he was forced by Apollo to work as a slave for
Omphale, the Queen of Lydia, and help her hold the wool at her spinning wheel. His dark and
frightful Danse macabre was originally written for voice and piano, but he reworked it a couple
years later substituting a violin for the voice and adding a full orchestra. When it was first
premiered, people asked for an encore and it has remained a popular piece ever since. It may be
As was mentioned earlier, Saint-Saens’s operas were not very popular during his time. In
fact, his opera Samson et Dalila was rejected in Paris because of the prejudice against biblical
characters. When it was due to be performed in London, the Lord Chamberlain banned the opera
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until 1909, about 30 years after its premiere. The opera contains the orchestral Bacchanale and a
Conclusion
composer and musician. He was a child prodigy who had perfect pitch and could play just about
anything on the piano. He had a tragic family life with the passing of his two sons and separation
from his wife. Saint-Saens had an intense knowledge and interest in geology, archaeology, math,
botany, and butterflies and enjoyed engaging in conversations with some of Europe’s best
scientists. He did not get along with many of his contemporaries and often criticized their work.
He composed during the Romantic period of music and adhered to the classical models. He kept
a conservative ideal of French music that emphasized polished craftmanship and a sense of form.
Camille Saint-Saens was an original who had a versatile mind and a love for music.
music teacher, it is my job to find ways for my students to relate and connect to music we listen
to in the general music classroom. I teach a full unit on Saint-Saens’ Carnival of the Animals to
my kindergarteners and they remember the music and activities we did because of the ways I use
stories, movement, and musical elements to connect them to the music of each animal. I wanted
to learn more about his background, life, and other musical works to share with my students and
fellow classmates in the program. Learning about different composers and how and where they
got their inspiration is insightful. As music educators and musicians, we can always learn
something from composers. Learning about their lives and what interests them can help us better
understand their music and how they feel during the composing process as well. Saint-Saens was
an intelligent and talented student, human, and musician and his music reflects this.
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Opera
Samson et Dalila
Bacchanale
Symphonic Poems
Le Rouet d’Omphale
Danse macabre
Symphonies
Symphony No. 1
Symphony No. 2
Symphony No. 4
Symphony No. 5
Musical Suite
Concertos
Film Score
References
Britannica. https://www.britannica.com/biography/Camille-Saint-Saens.
Klein, H. (1922). Saint-Saens as I Knew Him. The Musical Times, 63(948), 90-93.
https://doi.org/10.2307/910966.
Weinberg, R. (2018). Saint-Saens: Facts, pronunciation, works and more about the great
saens-facts/.