Le Guide musical (English: The Music Guide) was a weekly French-language Belgian and French classical music periodical founded 1 March 1855 in Brussels by Peter Bernhard Schott (1821–1873), of the Brussels music publishing house Schott frères (Schott brothers).
Editors and history
Maurice Kufferath (1852–1919) was editor from 1887 to 1891. In 1889, the editorial office relocated to Paris and began publishing from both Paris and Brussels. In 1892, Otto Junne, director of Schott frères, sold the periodical to Kufferath, the editor. From 1894 to 1905, Hugues Imbert (1842–1905) became editor-in-chief, then Henri de Curzon (1861–1942). Kufferath preserved the publication's Franco-Belgium character. The periodical ceased publication in 1918.
References
General references
Inline citations
- Nineteenth-Century Belgian Francophone Music Criticism in International Context, French speaking Free University of Brussels: Sociology Institute (conference host & publisher), 17 & 18 December 2010.Sandrine Thieffry, PhD, (musicologist at the Royal Conservatory of Brussels): 'Le Guide Musical:' Advertising Medium of the Schott Frères Music Publishing House of Brussels OCLC 843497248Posted online at the Institute of Musical Research, School of Advanced Study, University of London
- The Music Reviews and Criticism in Wallonia and Brussels in the Nineteenth Century, by Henri Albert Alexander Vanhulst (born 1943) (Brussels), Periodica Musica (in French), College Park: University of Maryland (publisher), vol. IX (1991), pp. 15–19; ISSN 0822-7594.
- "Le Guide musical". ripm. Retrieved 18 January 2017.
- 1855 establishments in Belgium
- Magazines published in Belgium
- Weekly magazines published in Belgium
- Classical music magazines
- Defunct magazines published in Belgium
- Defunct French-language magazines
- Defunct music magazines published in France
- Magazines established in 1855
- Magazines disestablished in 1918
- Defunct magazines published in Paris
- Magazines published in Brussels
- Musicology
- French-language magazines published in Belgium