Fiche technique
Format : Cartonné
Nb de pages : 134 pages
Poids : 400 g
Dimensions : 24cm X 31cm
ISBN : 978-2-87114-252-2
EAN : 9782871142522
Sax200
catalogue published on the occasion of the exhibition organized by the Musical Instruments Museum in Brussels from 8 February 2014 to 11 January 2015
Quatrième de couverture
Sax200
The catalogue
Adolphe Sax was a remarkable inventor, a talented businessman and an excellent musician, who learnt the art of instrument building from his father, Charles-Joseph. In his workshops, he conceived numerous improvements for musical instruments, never failing to patent his innovations. His first successes rapidly led to the development of an entirely new series of instruments, to which he gave his own name - saxhorns, saxotrombas and saxtubas, thus - and which immediately gained great popularity. His masterpiece, though, remains incontestably the saxophone, an instrument he immediately set about developing into an entire family, from the sopranino to the bourdon.
The curator of the exhibition, Géry Dumoulin, présents both the catalogue and the exhibition within a four-heading framework that tells the lively story of this incomparable innovator. It covers all the major aspects of Sax's life (both professional and private), his inventions and the hazards of his business life, and also touches on a number of less well known results of his fertile creativity, such as the médical appliances that he designed.
The exhibition
The 200th anniversary of the birth of Adolphe Sax (Dinant, 6 November 1814 - Paris, 7 February 1894) is upon us. The exhibition SAX200 thus provides the occasion to pay full tribute to his créations and the fresh wind he caused to blow through the musical life of his times. For the event, the Musical Instruments Museum in Brussels has dusted off its most important collection of instruments and documents connected with this imaginative inventor, adding to it items lent by top private and public collections in Belgium, France, Germany, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, Italy, Finland and the United States.