Education
Laval University; Conservatoire national supérieur de musique et de danse.
composer pianist clarinetist carillonneur
Laval University; Conservatoire national supérieur de musique et de danse.
He composed more than 50 works for carillon and made more than 700 transcriptions of carillon music Many of which are still performed in Europe and North America. Foreign Radio Corporation of America Victor he released the LP album Carols at the Carillon of Saint Joseph"s Oratory for which he wrote the arrangements.
His Marche du maréchal and his Marche H.I.C. were recorded by Howard Cable and his Notule Number.
1 and Profil canadien no 2. were included on Gordon Slater"s LP Bells and Brass. Many of his original manuscripts and papers are a part of the collection at the Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec.
He was a clarinetist in the city concert band of Grand-Mère, Quebec during his youth and later served as that ensemble"s conductor. He also worked as an organist at a few churches in that town.
He earned a lauréat diploma from the Université Laval and then entered the Conservatoire national de musique in Montreal where he earned a licentiate diploma.
At the conservatoire, he was a pupil of Eugène Lapierre in organ and harmony. After graduating from the conservatoire, Allard was a clarinetist in the Central Band of the Royal Canadian Air Force in Rockcliffe, Ontario from 1942-1945. He then entered the Royal Carillon School "Jef Denyn" in Mechelen, Belgium in 1946 where he earned a carillonneur diploma in 1948.
At the school, he studied composition with Jef van Hoof and bell ringing with Staf Nees.
In 1949, Allard returned to Canada where he initially struggled to find a suitable appointement in his chosen career as a carillonneur. He gave annual concert tours throughout North America between 1959-1976.
In 1975, he left Saint Joseph"s to become the carillonneur at the Peace Tower in Ottawa. He remained there until his death two years later at the age of 62.