Code: JP1085
ISMN: 979-0-3019-0276-9
Charles-Joseph Colin (1832-1881) was the sixth Professor of Oboe to be appointed at the Paris Conservatory. Born at Cherbourg, he received his early musical training from his father Charles-Louis Colin,
who was Professor of Harmony and conductor at the Opera of Bordeaux. Charles-Joseph was a pupil of the famous oboist Gustave Vogt, but also
studied organ with Francois Benoist and harmony with
Adolphe Adam and Ambroise Thomas. Charles-Joseph was
awarded first prize in oboe in 1852 at the young age of
twenty. A year later he won first prize in both harmony
and accompaniment, followed by the first prize in both
organ and counterpoint in 1854. In 1857 he crowned his
successes by winning the second Grand Prix de Rome with
his cantata Clovis et Clotilde.
When Colin was awarded the position of Professor of Oboe
at the Paris Conservatory in 1868, he succeeded Felix
Berthelemy, who had died only one year after being
appointed to the position. Following in the tradition of
other teachers at the conservatory when proposing the
required Concours work during his professorship, Colin
drew from his own compositions or those of earlier oboe
professors. He composed a total of eight Solos de
Concours plus a Grande Fantaisie for oboe and piano.
In 1877, Colin was awarded Officier d'Academie for his
services as a teacher, and in 1881, he was named as a
Knight of the Legion of Honour just a few days before
his death. Colin died during the 1881 Concours at the
age of forty-nine, and was succeeded that year by his
former student George Gillet as Professor of Oboe at the
Paris Conservatory.
This edition has been edited by Valarie Anderson.