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Louis Dro�et (1792-1873)
Perhaps the most peripatetic flutist in the age of
travelling virtuosi, the Dutch virtuoso Louis Dro�et
played at the age of seven at the Paris Conservatoire,
where he studied composition under Etienne Nicolas M�hul
and Antoine Reicha. In c1807, aged about fifteen,
he was appointed flute soloist to Louis Bonaparte, King
of The Netherlands, and presented with a crystal flute
by Laurent (NL-Amsterdam: Rijksmuseum). The French Emperor
Napoleon, the king's brother, invited him to Paris in
1811 and gave him a similar appointment and gift. While
in Paris he rivalled Tulou
as France's most popular flutist for two seasons.
Dro�et subsequently visited England as a traveling
virtuoso, and was noted for the brilliance of his playing
though not for its touching qualities. In the following
years he made a brief venture into the flute manufacturing
business with Cornelius Ward (c1796-1872), a
former foreman at Tebaldo Monzani's workshop, bulding
flutes in the 'Nicholson'
style for the booming English market. He toured Europe
with great success, living in Naples for three years,
and visiting Paris and London at Mendelssohn's invitation
in 1828-29. He made other successful tours to Paris
and London (1832), London again, for command performances
before Queen Victoria and Prince Albert (1841), New
York (1854), and Frankfurt (1860).
Dro�et first tried a Boehm
flute while visiting New York in 1854, when he praised
the instrument and wrote a set of studies for it, dedicated
to New York's foremost exponent of the new flute, Philip
Ernst.
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