Composers
Ludovic Lamothe
1882 - 1953About
Ludovic Lamothe was a pianist and a composer who was dedicated to creating a national music that honored the diaspora of Haitian heritage. He was born on May 22, 1882, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. He began studying music with his mother, the poet Virginie Sampeur, at an early age. Lamothe went on to study piano, clarinet, and music theory with his teacher Robert Joseph at the Saint Louis de Gonzaga Institution. In 1910, he earned a scholarship for further training at the Paris Conservatory of Music. Lamothe studied with Louis Diémer in Paris for one year before returning to Haiti, where he would spend the remainder of his life incorporating Haitian culture into his music.
In his beloved home country, Lamothe taught piano and played his compositions in Sunday afternoon salons at piano parlors and in the residences of upper- and middle-class Haitian citizens. He combined art music with Haitian elements, such as méringues and danzas, to capture the diverse essence of Haitian culture. His piece La dangereuse is a méringue lente, a slow méringue, that incorporates traditional quintolet dance rhythms. Nibo, on the other hand, is a Carnival méringue, that was meant to inspire dancing and celebration. This particular piece also holds historical significance because it debuted during the Carnival festivities in 1934, and its celebratory atmosphere anticipated the end of the US occupation of Haiti six months later. Lamothe further explored rhythmic elements of Vodou religious ceremonies in his pieces Sobo and Loco in an attempt to reconnect Haiti with its African heritage. In addition to pursuing this mission through the music, he also published several articles about this subject of diverse African culture.
Related Information
https://36keys.org/ludovic-lamothe/Works by Ludovic Lamothe
| Title | Work | Instrumentation | Level | Number of Movements | Accompanied | Size | Duration Range |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| La Dangereuse (Meringue Haitienne) | Piano | Advanced | 1 | No | Solo |