Henri Dutilleux

For the French painter Henri-Joseph-Constant Dutilleux, see Constant Dutilleux.
Dutilleux (left) with Régis Campo in 2004

Henri Dutilleux (French: [ɑ̃ʁi dytijø]; 22 January 1916 – 22 May 2013) was a French composer active mainly in the second half of the 20th century. His work, which garnered international acclaim, followed in the tradition of Maurice Ravel, Claude Debussy, Albert Roussel and Olivier Messiaen, but in an idiosyncratic style.

Some of his notable compositions include a piano sonata, two symphonies, the Cello Concerto Tout un monde lointain (A whole distant world), the Violin Concerto L'arbre des songes (The tree of dreams) and the String Quartet Ainsi la nuit (Thus the night). Some of these are regarded as masterpieces of 20th-century classical music.[1] Works were commissioned from him by such major artists as Charles Munch, George Szell, Mstislav Rostropovich, the Juilliard String Quartet, Isaac Stern, Paul Sacher, Anne-Sophie Mutter, Simon Rattle, Renée Fleming and Seiji Ozawa.

Writing in the New York Times, Paul Griffiths said: "Mr Dutilleux’s position in French music was proudly solitary. Between Olivier Messiaen and Pierre Boulez in age, he was little affected by either, though he took an interest in their work. .. But his voice, marked by sensuously handled harmony and color, was his own."[2]

Dutilleux was awarded several major prizes throughout his career, notably the Grand Prix de Rome (1938), International Music Council's International Rostrum of Composers (1955), the Grand-Croix de la Légion d'honneur (2004), the Ernst von Siemens Music Prize (2005), the Gold Medal of the Royal Philharmonic Society (2008) and the Kravis Prize (2011).

In addition to his activities as a composer, he worked as the Head of Music Production for Radio France for 18 years. He also taught at the École Normale de Musique de Paris, at the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique and was twice composer in residence at the Tanglewood music centre in Lenox and Stockbridge, Massachusetts.

Life

Henri Dutilleux was born on 22 January 1916 in Angers, Maine-et-Loire. He was the great-grandson of the painter Constant Dutilleux and of the composer Julien Koszul. He was also a cousin of the mathematician Jean-Louis Koszul. As a young man he studied harmony, counterpoint and piano with Victor Gallois at the Douai Conservatory before leaving for the Paris Conservatoire. There, between 1933 and 1938, he attended the classes of Jean and Noël Gallon (harmony and counterpoint, in which he won joint first prize with the cellist Paul Tortelier),[3] Henri Büsser (composition) and Maurice Emmanuel (history of music). He studied music at the Conservatoire de Paris in the same class as Henri Betti, Paul Bonneau and Louiguy.

Dutilleux won the Prix de Rome in 1938 for his cantata L'anneau du roi but did not complete his entire residency in Rome due to the outbreak of World War II. He worked for a year as a medical orderly in the army and then returned to Paris in 1940, where he worked as a pianist, arranger and music teacher. In 1942 he conducted the choir of the Paris Opera.

Dutilleux worked as Head of Music Production for Radio France from 1945 to 1963. He served as Professor of Composition at the École Normale de Musique de Paris from 1961 to 1970. He was appointed to the staff of the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique in 1970 and was composer in residence at Tanglewood in 1995 and 1998. His students included the French composers Gérard Grisey and Francis Bayer, the Canadian composers Alain Gagnon and Jacques Hétu, the British composer Kenneth Hesketh, and many others. Invited by Walter Fink, he was the 16th composer featured in the annual Komponistenporträt of the Rheingau Musik Festival in 2006.

For many years, Dutilleux had a studio on Île Saint-Louis, which was the heart of his existence.[4] He died on 22 May 2013 in Paris, aged 97[5] and was buried in Montparnasse Cemetery.[6]

Influences and style

Dutilleux's music extends the legacies of earlier French composers such as Debussy and Ravel but is also clearly influenced by Béla Bartók and Igor Stravinsky. Among his favourite pieces, he mentioned Beethoven's late string quartets and Debussy's Pelléas et Mélisande.[7]

His attitude toward serialism was more ambiguous. While he always paid attention to the developments of contemporary music and incorporated some serialist techniques into his own compositions,[8] he also criticized the more radical and intolerant aspects of the movement: "What I reject is the dogma and the authoritarianism which manifested themselves in that period".[9] As an independent composer, Dutilleux always refused to be associated with any school.[10] Rather, his works merge the traditions of earlier composers and post-World War II innovations and translate them into his own idiosyncratic style. His music also contains distant echoes of jazz as can be heard in the plucked double bass strings at the very beginning of his First Symphony and his frequent use of syncopated rhythms.

Dutilleux was greatly enamoured of vocalists, especially the jazz singer Sarah Vaughan and the great French chanson singers.[11]

Some of Dutilleux's trademarks include very refined orchestral textures; complex rhythms; a preference for atonality and modality over tonality; the use of pedal points that serve as atonal pitch centers;[12] and "reverse variation," by which a theme is not exposed immediately but rather revealed gradually, appearing in its complete form only after a few partial, tentative expositions.[13] His music also displays a very strong sense of structure and symmetry. This is particularly obvious from an "external" point of view i.e., the overall organisation of the different movements or the spatial distribution of the various instruments, but is also apparent in the music itself (themes, harmonies and rhythms mirroring, complementing or opposing each other). According to Stuart Jefferies, "A passage may be conceived as a symmetrical shape of notes on paper and only later given musical substance. He loves symmetrical musical figures such as palindromes or fan-shaped phrases..."[14][15]

Dutilleux's music was often influenced by art and literature, such as the works of Vincent van Gogh,[16] Charles Baudelaire[17] and Marcel Proust.[18] It also shows a concern for the concepts of time and memory, both in its use of quotations (notably from Béla Bartók, Benjamin Britten and Jehan Alain), and in short interludes that recall material used in earlier movements and/or introduce ideas that will be fully developed later.

A perfectionist with a strong sense of artistic integrity, he allowed only a small number of his works to be published; what he did publish he often repeatedly revised. In his own words:

I always doubt my work. I always have regrets. That's why I revise my work so much and, at the same time, I regret not being more prolific. But the reason I am not more prolific is because I doubt my work and spend a lot of time changing it. It's paradoxical, isn't it?[19]

Compositions

Dutilleux numbered as Op. 1 his Piano Sonata (1946–1948), written for the pianist Geneviève Joy, whom he had married in 1946. He renounced most of the works he composed before it because he did not believe them to be representative of his mature standards, considering many of them to be too derivative to have merit.[20]

After the Piano Sonata, Dutilleux started working on his First Symphony (1951). It consists of four monothematic movements and has a perfectly symmetrical structure: music slowly emerges from silence (first movement—a passacaglia) and builds towards a fast climax (second—a scherzo and moto perpetuo), keeps its momentum (third—"a continuous melodic line that never goes back on itself"), and finally slowly fades out (fourth—a theme and variations).[21]

In 1953, Dutilleux wrote the music for the ballet Le loup ("The Wolf").

In his Second Symphony, titled Le double (1959), the orchestra is divided into two groups: a small one at the front with instruments taken from the various sections (brass, woodwind, strings and percussion) and a bigger one at the back consisting of the rest of the orchestra. Although this brings to mind the Baroque concerto grosso, the approach is different: in this piece, the smaller ensemble acts as a mirror or ghost of the bigger one, sometimes playing similar or complementary lines, sometimes contrasting ones.[22]

His next work, Métaboles (for orchestra, 1965) explores the idea of metamorphosis, how a series of subtle and gradual changes can radically transform a structure. A different section of the orchestra dominates each of the first four movements before the fifth brings them all together for the finale. As a result, it can be considered as a concerto for orchestra.[23] It quickly achieved celebrity and, following its première by George Szell and the Cleveland Orchestra, was performed in several North American cities, then in France.[24] Métaboles is now one of his most often performed works.[25]

In the 1960s, Dutilleux met Mstislav Rostropovich, who commissioned him to write a cello concerto. Rostropovich premièred the work, titled Tout un monde lointain... [A whole distant world], in 1970. It is one of the most important additions to the cello repertoire of the second half of the 20th century[26][27] and is considered one of the composer's major achievements.[28]

After the cello concerto, Dutilleux turned to chamber music for the first time in more than 20 years and wrote the string quartet Ainsi la nuit (1976). It consists of seven movements, some of which are linked by short "parentheses". The function of these parentheses is to recall material that has already been heard and to introduce fragments that will be fully developed later.[29] It is based on a hexachord (C-G-F-G-C-D) which highlights the intervals of fifth and major second.[30] Each movement emphasizes various special effects (pizzicato, glissandi, harmonics, extreme registers, contrasting dynamics...) resulting in a difficult and elaborate work[29] which has been called "one of the treasures of the 20th century quartet repertoire".[31] He also published various works for piano (3 Préludes, Figures de résonances) and 3 strophes sur le nom de Sacher (1976–1982) for solo cello. The latter work was originally composed on the occasion of Paul Sacher's 70th birthday in 1976, on a request by the Russian cellist Mstislav Rostropovich to write compositions for cello solo using his name spelt out in musical notes as the theme eS-A-C-H-E-Re (Es is E-flat in German, H is B-natural in German, and Re is D in French; see Sacher hexachord).

He then returned to orchestral works in 1978 with Timbres, espace, mouvement ou la nuit etoilée, inspired by Vincent van Gogh's The Starry Night. In this composition, Dutilleux attempted to translate into musical terms the opposition between emptiness and movement conveyed by the painting. The work employs a string section of only lower-register instruments: cellos and double basses, no violins or violas.[29]

In 1985, Isaac Stern premiered L'arbre des songes [The Tree of Dreams], a violin concerto that he had commissioned Dutilleux to write. Like its cello counterpart, it is an important addition to the instrument's 20th century repertoire. According to the composer, it is based on a process of continual growth and renewal (hence the title): "All in all the piece grows somewhat like a tree, for the constant multiplication and renewal of its branches is the lyrical essence of the tree. This symbolic image, as well as the notion of a seasonal cycle, inspired my choice of 'L'arbre des songes' as the title of the piece."[32]

Dutilleux later wrote Mystère de l'instant (for cymbalum, string orchestra and percussion, 1989), Les Citations (for oboe, harpsichord, double bass and percussion, 1991), The Shadows of Time (for orchestra and children voices, 1997), Slava's Fanfare (for Rostropovich's 70th birthday, 1997) and Sur le même accord (for violin and orchestra, 2002 – dedicated to Anne-Sophie Mutter).

In 2003, he completed Correspondances, a song-cycle for soprano and orchestra inspired by poems and letters by Prithwindra Mukherjee, Rainer Maria Rilke, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn and Vincent van Gogh. This work has received a very enthusiastic reception and has been programmed several times since its première.[33]

His last major work was a song-cycle entitled Le temps l'horloge,[34] written for American soprano Renée Fleming. It consists of four pieces and an instrumental interlude on two poems by Jean Tardieu, one by Robert Desnos and one by Charles Baudelaire. The first three songs were premièred at the Saito Kinen Festival Matsumoto, Japan in September 2007. The American première of this partial version took place in November 2007 with the Boston Symphony Orchestra.[35] The complete work was unveiled on 7 May 2009 at the Théâtre des Champs-Elysées in Paris.[36][37]

In 2010, Dutilleux added a third movement to his chamber work Les Citations.[38] The expanded version was premiered at the Festival d’Auvers-sur-Oise.

In 2011, Pascal Gallois transcribed with Dutilleux's approval three of his early vocal works for bassoon and piano: Regards sur l'Infini (from the early cycle for voice and piano Quatre mélodies) and Deux sonnets de Jean Cassou (originally for baritone and piano). He played them in a concert at the Hôtel de Lauzun in presence of the composer.[39]

While Dutilleux allowed only a small number of his works to be published, he actually wrote a lot of music but kept only a small fraction of it.[40] Dutilleux talked several times about his projects and expressed the wish to write more chamber music,[41] notably a second string quartet, a piece for clarinet and ensemble, one for solo double bass as well as some additional piano préludes.[21][42][43][44] He long considered composing an opera but abandoned that project because he could not find a libretto that appealed to him.[21][42]

Those who commissioned works from Dutilleux included Charles Munch (Symphony No. 2, Le double), George Szell (Métaboles), Mstislav Rostropovich (Tout un monde lointain and Timbres, espace, mouvement), Isaac Stern (L'arbre des songes), Anne-Sophie Mutter (Sur le même accord) and Seiji Ozawa (The Shadows of Time and Le temps l'horloge).

Works

Dutilleux disowned many of the compositions he wrote before his Piano Sonata (1948). They are listed separately under Early works.

Orchestral

Concertante

Chamber/instrumental

Piano

Vocal

Ballet

Arrangements

Early works

Dutilleux disowned most of these pieces, written before his Piano Sonata of 1948. Some of them are nonetheless played and recorded regularly, in particular the Sonatine for Flute and Piano.

Chamber/instrumental

Vocal

Piano

Stature and tributes

Following Dutilleux's death, the composer and conductor Laurent Petitgirard paid tribute to him as "one of the very rare contemporary composers" whose music became part of the repertoire in his lifetime, predicting that "[h]is work will remain intensely present after his death".[45]

Several major musicians and conductors championed Dutilleux's works notably Charles Munch, George Szell, Mstislav Rostropovich, the Juilliard String Quartet, Isaac Stern, Paul Sacher, Anne-Sophie Mutter, Simon Rattle, Renee Fleming and Seiji Ozawa.

The conductor and composer Esa-Pekka Salonen said of his music: "His production is rather small but every note has been weighed with golden scales... It's just perfect – very haunting, very beautiful. There’s some kind of sadness in his music which I find very touching and arresting."[46]

The critic Tom Service, writing for the BBC, said: "Dutilleux's exquisite catalogue of pieces is becoming, rightly, ever more popular with performers and listeners all over the world".[47]

An obituary in Gramophone commented that "Dutilleux represented a generation of musicians with roots almost back into the 19th century; certainly his music can be seen in a direct line from that of his great predecessors Debussy and Ravel."[48]

Roger Nichols, in an obituary in The Guardian, described him as "the outstanding French composer between Messiaen and Boulez", adding that he "achieved a wholly individual synthesis of ear-catching colours and harmonies with formal rigour."[49]

The Daily Telegraph said: "Because Dutilleux was a perfectionist and self-critical to a fault, his output was small. He wrote barely a dozen major works in his career, destroyed much of his early music and often revised what he had written. His early work was clearly derivative of Ravel, Debussy and Roussel; but his later music, though influenced by Bartok and Stravinsky, was entirely original and often seemed—in its scale—more German than French."

However, The Daily Telegraph’s critic Philip Hensher described Dutilleux as "the Laura Ashley of music; tasteful, unfaultable, but hardly ever daring ... Personally," Hensher admitted, "I can’t stick him."[50]

Rob Cowan, the BBC Radio 3 presenter and critic, recalled in June 2013 an interview with Dutilleux in which the composer had told Cowan that his personal favourite among his own works was Tout un monde lointain.[51]

Awards and prizes

Honours

Notes

  1. "Henri Dutilleux | Biography, Albums, & Streaming Radio". AllMusic. Retrieved 2015-11-16.
  2. Paul Griffiths (23 May 2013). "Henri Dutilleux, Modernist Composer, Dies at 97". The New York Times. Retrieved 24 May 2013.
  3. Blum, David; Tortelier, Paul (1984). Paul Tortelier: a self-portrait, in conversation with David Blum (1 ed.). London: Heinemann. p. 53. ISBN 0-434-78860-0.
  4. Roger Nichols (2013-01-21). "Henri Dutilleux obituary | Music". The Guardian. Retrieved 2015-11-16.
  5. Pierre Gervasoni (22 May 2013). "Le compositeur français Henri Dutilleux est mort". Le Monde. Retrieved 22 May 2013.
  6. "Henri Dutilleux (1916 - 2013) - Find A Grave Memorial". Findagrave.com. Retrieved 2015-11-16.
  7. "Mezzo Voce interview". Youtube.com. 2010. Retrieved 2015-11-16.
  8. "'Obsessionnel', the third movement of Métaboles, uses a note row. . . ." (Potter 2001), also quoted at Ensemble Sospeso website; Nichols and Dutilleux 1994, 87.
  9. Nichols and Dutilleux 1994, 87.
  10. Archived 9 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine.
  11. Henri Dutilleux; Claude Glayman (2003). Henri Dutilleux: Music—mystery and Memory : Conversations with Claude Glayman. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. pp. 110–1. ISBN 978-0-7546-0899-8. Retrieved 26 May 2013.
  12. "This use of pivot chords (or pivot notes) is a constant of Dutilleux's mature style, and provides a point of reference for the listener within an essentially atonal context" (Potter 2007, 53).
  13. Potter 2001, also quoted on Ensemble Sospeso website (5th paragraph). BBC Philharmonic website, "Latest Concerts from the Manchester Student Music Network" Saturday 25 November (undated) (accessed 19 June 2008). Swart ?2007.
  14. Jeffries 2005.
  15. "Dutilleux pousse plus avant encore que Bartók les symétries de tout type, rétrogrades (par exemple au début du quatuor Ainsi la nuit, 1974–1976) ou en miroir" (Amblard 2007).
  16. "A great lover of painting, Dutilleux claimed to have van Gogh's La nuit etoilee always in mind when writing Timbres, espace, mouvement, and later added the title of the painting as a subtitle to his work" (Potter 2001)
  17. "Baudelaire's poetry inspired the cello concerto Tout un monde lointain...; all five movements feature a Baudelaire epigraph at the head of the score" (Potter 2001).
  18. "It is especially the ideas of time and memory, more specifically involuntary memory that the internationally acclaimed French composer Henri Dutilleux finds attractive. Dutilleux often refers to Proust's influence on his music. Furthermore, they both believe in direct experience and communication as the essential function of the work of art" (Swart and Spies 2007).
  19. "Work of the week - Henri Dutilleux: Le temps l'horloge". Schott-music.com. Retrieved 2015-11-16.
  20. The Living Composers Project: "Henri Dutilleux" (accessed 19 June 2008), paragraph 2.
  21. 1 2 3 Henri Dutilleux; Claude Glayman (2003). Henri Dutilleux: Music—mystery and Memory: Conversations with Claude Glayman. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. pp. 33–34. ISBN 978-0-7546-0899-8. Retrieved 26 May 2013.
  22. Seen and Heard International: Glyn Pursglove, "Concert Review: Dutilleux, Bartok", accessed 26 May 2013
  23. Henri Dutilleux; Claude Glayman (2003). Henri Dutilleux: Music—mystery and Memory: Conversations with Claude Glayman. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 58. ISBN 978-0-7546-0899-8. Retrieved 26 May 2013.
  24. CIRM – Centre National de Création Musicale, 2006 "Les Métaboles furent commandées en 1959 par le chef George Szell à Henri Dutilleux à l'occasion du quarantième anniversaire de l'Orchestre de Cleveland, qui en assura la création le 14 janvier 1965 sous la direction du commanditaire. L'œuvre connut rapidement la célébrité et fut reprise dans les grandes villes nord-américaines puis en France." Métaboles, accessed 26 May 2013
  25. Wasselin 2007 at the Wayback Machine (archived 16 July 2011)
  26. "The great Russian cellist Mstislav Rostropovich commissioned Dutilleux to write Tout un monde lointain, now an important work in the cello repertoire." London Symphony Orchestra – 2009 at the Wayback Machine (archived 20 December 2010)
  27. "Tout un monde lointain... un des plus beaux concertos pour violoncelle de la seconde moitié du XXe siècle qui... s'est trouvé hissé au premier rang, celui des concertos de Chostakovitch, Penderecki, Britten..." (Peters 2007).
  28. "In the meantime other cellists had Dutilleux's concerto in their repertoire and several other recordings are now available. Tout un monde lointain... is a splendid work and probably one of the composer's finest achievements"(Culot 2008).
  29. 1 2 3 Simon Marin's liner notes (Erato CD 0630-14068-2)
  30. Marie-Delcambe Monpoël, La nuit et le temps dans le Quatuor de Dutilleux page 94 in Henri Dutilleux Entre le cristal et la nuée
  31. "50ish Essential String Quartets for Fun and Profit". Rate Your Music. Retrieved 2015-11-16.
  32. Robert Adelson (1985-11-05). "L'arbre des songes, concerto for… | Details". AllMusic. Retrieved 2015-11-16.
  33. "Correspondances... Je suis heureux que cette œuvre soit beaucoup jouée en ce moment, vingt fois dans le monde!" (Costantino 2006).
  34. Archived 9 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine.
  35. Eichler 2007. Boston.com (30 November 2007).
  36. "The Classical Music Network". ConcertoNet.com. Retrieved 2015-11-16.
  37. "« Le Temps l'horloge » de Dutilleux, enfin complet". LeMonde.fr. Retrieved 2015-11-16.
  38. Paulino, Romain (27 June 2010). "Henri Dutilleux fêté au Festival d'Auvers-sur-Oise". ResMusica. Retrieved 26 May 2013.
  39. "Pascal Gallois". Pascal Gallois. Retrieved 2015-11-16.
  40. "This modest output—modest in quantity, though not in quality—is nonetheless deceptive. His biographer Caroline Potter reports, 'Dutilleux has said that, contrary to what may be assumed by glancing at his catalogue, he actually writes a great deal, but uses only a small percentage of the material.'" (The Marie-Josée Kravis Prize for New Music at the New York Philharmonic 2011)
  41. "... je voudrais combler les lacunes de mon œuvre ; ce que je n’ai pas fait ou trop peu. Par exemple, j’ai peu d’oeuvres de musique de chambre" (Costantino 2006).
  42. 1 2 Bruno Serrou. "Classique d'aujourd'hui, blog d'actualité de la musique classique et contemporaine: Le grand compositeur français Henri Dutilleux est mort". Brunoserrou.blogspot.be. Retrieved 2015-11-16.
  43. "Nor is the cycle meant as a swan song—the composer has expressed interest in returning to the string quartet genre" (May 2007 at the Wayback Machine (archived 19 July 2011))
  44. "La Chronique d'Altamusica". Altamusica.com. 2013-05-23. Retrieved 2015-11-16.
  45. "Famed French composer Dutilleux dies aged 97". google.com. 2013. Retrieved 22 May 2013.
  46. Brian Wise (22 May 2013). "Henri Dutilleux, Leading French composer, Dies at Age 97". wqxr.org. Retrieved 23 May 2013.
  47. Tom Service (22 May 2013). "Henri Dutilleux, French composer, dies aged 97". bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 22 May 2013.
  48. Obituary: Henri Dutilleux – composer. gramophone.co.uk (22 January 1916).
  49. Henri Dutilleux obituary | Music. The Guardian (22 January 1916).
  50. "Henri Dutilleux". The Daily Telegraph. 22 May 2013. Retrieved 23 May 2013.
  51. "A novelist, a botanist, a TV writer, a missionary and a composer". bbc.co.uk. 9 June 2013. Retrieved 9 June 2013.
  52. Nomination by Sovereign Ordonnance n° 13454 of 13 May 1998 (French)
  53. https://www.legifrance.gouv.fr/affichTexte.do?cidTexte=JORFTEXT000000433704&fastPos=1&fastReqId=1778133132&categorieLien=id&oldAction=rechTexte

References

  • Amblard, Jacques. 2007. "Parcours de l'oeuvre de Henri Dutilleux (1916)". BRAHMS: Base de documentation sur la musique contemporaine. Paris: Ircam—Centre Pompidou (2 October).
  • Costantino, Cédric. 2006. "Applaudir: Entretien avec Henri Dutilleux". Classiquenews.com (11 May). (Accessed 19 June 2008)
  • Culot, Hubert. 2008. "CD Review Dutilleux – Caplet Works for cello" MusicWeb International (September).
  • Dutilleux, Henri, and Claude Glayman. 1993. Henri Dutilleux, Mystère et Mémoire des Sons: Entretiens avec Claude Glayman. Paris: Belfond. ISBN 2-7144-2971-8. English edition, as Henri Dutilleux: Music—Mystery and Memory: Conversations with Claude Glayman, translated by Roger Nichols. Aldershot (Hants) and Burlington (VT): Ashgate, 2003. ISBN 0-7546-0899-9.
  • Eichler, Jeremy. 2007. "Henri Dutilleux's Search for Lost Time (and the Clock)". The Boston Globe (30 November).
  • Jeffries, Stuart. 2005. "Contentious, moi?" The Guardian (28 April 2005).
  • May, Thomas. 2007. "Henri Dutilleux: 'Le Temps l’Horloge,' for Soprano and Orchestra" at the Wayback Machine (archived 19 July 2011) [program notes]. Boston: Boston Symphony Orchestra (29 November) (archive from 19 July 2011).
  • Nichols, Roger, and Henri Dutilleux. 1994. "Progressive Growth: Roger Nichols Talks to Henri Dutilleux about His Life and Music". The Musical Times 135, no. 1812 (February): 87–90.
  • Peters, Jean-François. 2007. "Henri Dutilleux, Tout un monde lointain... , concerto pour violoncelle en présence du compositeur". Classiquenews.com (10 January 2007).
  • Potter, Caroline. 2001. "Dutilleux, Henri". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell, 7:770–77. London: Macmillan.
  • Potter, Caroline. 1997. Henri Dutilleux: His Life and Works. Aldershot (UK) and Brookfield (Vermont, USA): Ashgate Publishing Company. ISBN 1-85928-330-6.
  • Potter, Caroline. 2006. "Dutilleux at 90". Musical Times 147, no.1894 (Spring): 51–58.
  • Rae, Caroline. 2000. "Henri Dutilleux and Maurice Ohana: Victims of an Exclusion Zone?" Tempo, new series, 212 (April): 22–30.
  • Serrou, Bruno. 1995. . Entretien avec Henri Dutilleux. Paris (19 December 1995).
  • Swart, Bernarda. [2007]. "Proust's memory concept in Dutilleux's Sonata for Oboe and Piano (1947)" Brigham Young University Hawaii: Fine Arts website (accessed 19 June 2008).
  • Swart, Bernarda, and Bertha Spies. 2007. "Om te onthou: Marcel Proust en Henri Dutilleux". Tydskrif vir Geesteswetenskappe 47, no. 2:243–58.
  • Wasselin, Christian. 2007. "Portrait: L’humble fierté d’Henri Dutilleux" at the Wayback Machine (archived 16 July 2011). Scenesmagazine.com (July) (archive from 16 July 2011).
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