0
Lili Boulanger
Lili Boulanger
French composer
1
Germaine Tailleferre
Germaine Tailleferre
French composer
2
Olivier Messiaen
Olivier Messiaen
French composer, organist and ornithologist
3
Ottorino Respighi
Ottorino Respighi
Italian composer, musicologist and conductor
4
Claude Debussy
Claude Debussy
French composer
5
Nadia Boulanger
Nadia Boulanger
French musician and teacher
6
Paul Dukas
Paul Dukas
French composer
7
Hedwige Chrétien
Hedwige Chrétien
French composer
8
Ambroise Thomas
Ambroise Thomas
French composer
9
Francis Poulenc
Francis Poulenc
French composer and pianist (1899-1963)
10
Jacques Ibert
Jacques Ibert
French composer
11
Costin Miereanu
Costin Miereanu
French composer
12
Grażyna Bacewicz
Grażyna Bacewicz
Polish composer, violinist
13
Stefans Grové
Stefans Grové
South African composer
14
Charles-Édouard Lefebvre
Charles-Édouard Lefebvre
French composer
15
Marguerite Canal
Marguerite Canal
composer
16
Katherine Kennicott Davis
Katherine Kennicott Davis
American teacher, classical music composer, pianist
17
Cindy McTee
Cindy McTee
American composer
18
Paul Bonneau
Paul Bonneau
French composer
19
Marcelle de Manziarly
Marcelle de Manziarly
French composer
20
Luise Adolpha Le Beau
Luise Adolpha Le Beau
German composer
Elsa Barraine
French composer (b. 1910)

Elsa Barraine

Intro
French composer (b. 1910)
Awards Received
Prix de Rome
Music
Elsa Barraine in 1940

Elsa Jacqueline Barraine (13 February 1910, in Paris – 20 March 1999, in Strasbourg) was a composer of French music in the time after the neoclassicist movement of Les Six, Ravel, and Stravinsky. Despite being considered “one of the outstanding French composers of the mid-20th century,” Barraine's music is seldom performed today. She won the Prix de Rome in 1929 for La vierge guerrière, a sacred trilogy named for Joan of Arc, and was the fourth woman ever to receive that prestigious award (after Lili Boulanger in 1913, Marguerite Canal in 1920, and Jeanne Leleu in 1923).