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Louis de Froment
Louis de Froment
French conductor
1
Yannick Nézet-Séguin
Yannick Nézet-Séguin
Canadian conductor and pianist
2
Pablo Heras-Casado
Pablo Heras-Casado
Spanish conductor
3
Manuel Rosenthal
Manuel Rosenthal
French composer and conductor
4
Jean Martinon
Jean Martinon
French conductor and composer
5
William Steinberg
William Steinberg
American conductor
6
Julius Baker
Julius Baker
American musician
7
Armin Jordan
Armin Jordan
Swiss conductor (1932-2006)
8
Charles Munch
Charles Munch
French musician
9
Charles Dutoit
Charles Dutoit
Swiss conductor
10
Esa-Pekka Salonen
Esa-Pekka Salonen
Finnish conductor and composer
11
Mats Lidström
Mats Lidström
Swedish musician
12
Jonathan Darlington
Jonathan Darlington
British conductor
13
James Loughran
James Loughran
British conductor
14
Laurence Dale
Laurence Dale
English tenor
15
Bechara El Khoury
Bechara El Khoury
Franco–Lebanese composer
16
Ernest Bour
Ernest Bour
French conductor
17
Sarah Chang
Sarah Chang
violinist
18
Kent Nagano
Kent Nagano
American conductor and opera administrator
19
Nicolas Dautricourt
Nicolas Dautricourt
French violinist
20
Marek Janowski
Marek Janowski
German conductor
Intro
French conductor
Jean Fournet (1967)

Jean Fournet (14 April 1913 – 3 November 2008) was a French flutist and conductor.

Fournet was born in Rouen in 1913. His father was a flutist who gave him some instruction on the flute and music theory. Fournet was then trained at the Conservatoire de Paris in flute by Gaston Blanquart and Marcel Moyse, and conducting by Philippe Gaubert (himself a flutist). He performed on the flute at age fifteen with the Orchestra of the Théâtre des Arts in Rouen. He first established himself as a conductor in his native country conducting in Rouen 1936-1940, Marseilles 1940-1944, and then as director of the Paris Opéra-Comique 1944-1957. He was also a professor of conducting at the École Normale de Musique de Paris 1944-1962. In 1949, and again in 1950, he was guest conductor with the Radio Éireann Symphony Orchestra. His debut with the Concertgebouw Orchestra was in 1950. The Netherlands became Fournet’s second home. He became principal guest conductor of the Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra in Hilversum 1961-1968, where he also taught conducting. He married Miriam-Hannecart Jakes, an American who performed the Cor anglais with the Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra from 1977.

He served as music director of the Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra 1968-1973, and the newly created Orchestre National de l’Île de France 1973-1982. He was the conductor of the Tokyo Metropolitan Symphony Orchestra 1983-1986 (he was given the title Honorary Conductor in 1989, and on his death in 2008 he was honored again with the title Permanent Honorary Conductor). His debut with the Lyric Opera of Chicago was in 1965 with a double bill of Carmina Burana and L'heure espagnole, and his debut with the Metropolitan Opera in New York was on March 28, 1987 where he conducted Samson et Dalila.

Fournet was also president of the jury of the Besançon International Conductor's Competition for many years.

He proved a welcome addition to opera companies in America, where the French style had become something of a lost art. Beyond stage work, he proved, both early and late, a persuasive interpreter of the French symphonic literature. He was known as a gentle perfectionist, rarely raising his voice in rehearsal. Jean Fournet's career extended over an extraordinarily long period. His final concert was conducted in January 2005, at age 91, with the Tokyo Metropolitan Symphony Orchestra. Following that concert he retired to his home in Weesp near Hilversum in the Netherlands, where he died in 2008, aged 95.