Composers

Paul Juon

Piano
Violin
Cello
Viola
Orchestra
Clarinet
Piano four hands
Voice
Oboe
Bassoon
Piece
Sonata
Symphonic poem
Trio
Quartet
Suite
Concerto
Symphony
Sketches
Bagatelle
by popularity

#

10 Esquisses, Op.552 Kleine Stücke for Violin and Piano, Op.522 Suiten, Op.623 Bagatelles for Violin and Piano, Op.193 Lieder, Op.994 Miniaturen, Op.484 Piano Pieces, Op.654 Stücke for Violin and Piano, Op.285 Stücke for Piano, Op.775 Stücke für Streichorchester, Op.166 Piano Pieces, Op.126 Skizzen, Op.17 Kleine Tondichtungen, Op.81

A

Arabesken, Op.73Aus alter Zeit, Op.68

B

Bagatellen, Op.36

C

Cello Sonata, Op.54Clarinet Sonata, Op.82

D

Den Kindern zum Lauschen, Op.38Die Unzertrennlichen, Op.75Divertimento, Op.34Divertimento, Op.51

E

Episodes Concertantes, Op.45

F

Flute Sonata, Op.78

I

In Futurum 2, Op.80Intime Harmonieen, Op.30

J

Jotunheimen, Op.71

K

Kammersinfonie, Op.27Kleine Suite, Op.20Kleiner Walzer, Op.58

L

Litaniae, Op.70

M

Märchen, Op.8Moments lyriques, Op.56Mörtelweib's Tochter, Op.6MosaikMysterien, Op.59

P

Piano Quartet No.2, Op.50Piano Quintet No.1, Op.33Piano Quintet No.2, Op.44Piano Sextet, Op.22Piano Sonatina, Op.47Piano Trio No.1, Op.17Piano Trio No.2, Op.39Piano Trio No.3, Op.60Präludien und Capricen, Op.26Psyche, Op.32

R

Rhapsodie, Op.37Rhapsodische Sinfonie, Op.95

S

Satyre und Nymphen, Op.18Schelmenweisen, Op.46Silhouettes, Op.43Silhouettes, Op.9String Quartet No.1, Op.5String Quartet No.2, Op.29String Quartet No.3, Op.67Suite, Op.89Symphony No.2, Op.23

T

Tanzrhythmen I and II, Op.14Tanzrhythmen III, IV and V, Op.24Tanzrhythmen VI and VII, Op.41Trio-Miniaturen, Opp.18a, 24a

V

Viola Sonata, Op.15Violin Concerto No.2, Op.49Violin Concerto No.3, Op.88Violin Sonata No.1, Op.7Violin Sonata No.2, Op.69Violin Sonata No.3, Op.86

Z

Zwiegespräch
Wikipedia
Paul Juon (Russian: Па́вел Фёдорович Юо́н, Pavel Fyodorovich Yuon; 6 March 1872 – 21 August 1940) was a Russian-born Swiss composer.
He was born in Moscow, where his father was an insurance official. His parents were Swiss, and he attended a German Primary school in Moscow. In 1889, he entered the Moscow Conservatory, where he studied violin with Jan Hřímalý and composition with Anton Arensky and Sergei Taneyev. He completed his studies at the Hochschule für Musik in Berlin, under Woldemar Bargiel. His first (privately) printed works, two Romanzen (lieder) appeared in 1894, the year he began studies with Bargiel. During his time in Berlin he was a composition professor, employed by Joseph Joachim; his students included Hans Chemin-Petit, Werner Richard Heymann, Nikos Skalkottas, Henry Jolles, Pancho Vladigerov, Philipp Jarnach, Heinrich Kaminski, Lauri Ikonen, Max Trapp, Heino Kaski, Yrjö Kilpinen, Gerhart von Westerman, Hans Moltkau, Giannis Konstantinidis, Wilhelm Guttmann, Stefan Wolpe, Nicolas Nabokov and Gunnar Johansen. He retired to Switzerland in 1934, and died in Vevey.
His works include sonatas for viola, cello, winds, and three for violin (the third was recorded on a multi-LP set called Musik zwischen den Kriegen : eine Berliner Dokumentation), four symphonies (including one in manuscript) and also a chamber symphony, four string quartets, several piano trios, piano quartets and piano quintets as well as one sextet for piano and strings from 1902 and a wind quintet, a number of concerted works including three violin concerti and a triple concerto with piano trio, many piano works and lieder, and a number of stage works including an opera Aleko.
Several of these works have been recorded on compact disc, including some of the sonatas, two of the concertos, two of the symphonies, all four string quartets and all of the piano trios. He is known to have orchestrated Johannes Brahms' Hungarian Dance No. 4.
He also translated Arensky's 'Practical Studies in Harmony' into German.
He was twice married: He married his first wife in Katharina Schalchalova, married in 1896, and had three children: Ina, Aja, Ralf. Katharina died in 1911. In 1912, he married to Marie Hegner-Günthert (called Armande) and together they also had three children: Stella, Irsa and Rémi. He dedicated his Mysterien, Op 59 to Armande in 1928.
His younger brother was the painter Konstantin Yuon.