Charles Edouard Camille Prilipp (Camille Schubert --
1810 - 1889) was a French composer and author of many
quadrilles, waltzes and other dance music, he was also
music a publisher in Paris.
He was the nephew of Leon Prilipp, a worker at Pleyel,
who founded his own workshop in 1816 for the production
of pianos and music publishing. Thus after the death of
Ignace Pleyel in 1831, Prilipp recovered part of the
catalog, including works by Chopin. From 1827 (when he
was just 17 years old), Pr...(+)
Charles Edouard Camille Prilipp (Camille Schubert --
1810 - 1889) was a French composer and author of many
quadrilles, waltzes and other dance music, he was also
music a publisher in Paris.
He was the nephew of Leon Prilipp, a worker at Pleyel,
who founded his own workshop in 1816 for the production
of pianos and music publishing. Thus after the death of
Ignace Pleyel in 1831, Prilipp recovered part of the
catalog, including works by Chopin. From 1827 (when he
was just 17 years old), Prilipp publishes his first
romances. He first published his works under his real
name (until Opus 6), but soon after masked his identity
by borrowing the name of the famous Viennese.
By the middle of the century, his notoriety was
international: the most famous of his plays were
published or reissued in Germany, England and the
United States - it must be said that, in terms of
dance, it is Paris who, then, set the tone. Thus in
1847, one can read in The Musical World that "Camille
Schubert, Strauss and Redler are well known and very
popular".
Source: Wikipedia
(https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camille_Schubert).
Although originally scored for Piano, I created this
Interpretation of the "Le Soupir" (Opus 302) Grande
Valse for Flute & Strings (2 Violins, Viola, Cello &
Bass).