Background
He was born during the Ancien Régime in 1775 in Rouen, France.
He was born during the Ancien Régime in 1775 in Rouen, France.
He received his first musical education from M. Broche, the cathedral organist, who appears to have treated him very harshly.
He began composing songs and chamber music at a very early age-his first opera, La Fitte coupable (the libretto by his father), and his second opera, Rosalie et Myrza, being produced on the stage of Rouen in 1795.
Not satisfied with his local success he went to Paris in 1795.
His scores were submitted to Cherubini, Mehul and others, but met with little approbation.
Grand opera was the order of the day.
Boieldieu had to fall back on his talent as a pianoforte-player for a livelihood.
Success came at last from an unexpected source.
In the drawing-rooms of the Directoire Garat sang the charming songs and ballads with which the young composer supplied him.
Thus Boieldieu's reputation gradually extended to wider circles.
Several other operas followed in rapid succession, of which only Le Calife de Bagdad (1800) has escaped oblivion.
Mafleuroy, a celebrated ballet- dancer of the Paris opera, took flight and went to Russia, where he was received with open arms by the emperor Alexander.
During his prolonged stay at St Petersburg he composed a number of operas.
He also set to music the choruses of Racine's Alhalie, one of his few attempts at the tragic style of dramatic writing.
In 1811 he returned to his own country, where the following year witnessed the production of one of his finest works, Jean de Paris, in which he depicted with much felicity the charming coquetry of the queen of Navarre, the chivalrous verve of the king, the officious pedantry of the seneschal, and the amorous tenderness of the page.
He succeeded Mehul as professor of composition at the Conservatoire in 1817.
Le Chapeau rouge was produced with great success in 1818.
The libretto, written by Scribe, was partly suggested by Walter Scott's Monastery, and several original Scottish tunes cleverly introduced by the composer add to the melodious charm and local colour of the work.
He vainly tried to escape the rapid progress of the illness by travel in Italy and the south of France, but returned to Paris only to die on the 8th of October 1834.
( Digital Sheet Music of Overture from The Calif of Bagda...)
He was a freemason, initiated at the Parisian lodge Les Arts et l'Amitié ('Arts and Friendship') – belonging to the Grand Orient of France, – as well as having been a member of the lodge 'Palestine' (in St Petersburg).
He married the dancer Clotilde Mafleurai. He was survived by an illegitimate son (Adrien) Louis (Victor) (1815–83)