Marie Juliette Boulanger, known professionally as Lili Boulanger, was born on August twenty-first, eighteen ninety-three, in France. She emerged as a remarkable composer and musician, closely associated with the Symbolist and Impressionist movements. Lili made history as the first woman to win the prestigious Grand Prix de Rome composition competition, a testament to her extraordinary talent and dedication to her craft.
Coming from a musical family, Lili was the younger sister of Nadia Boulanger, a renowned composer and composition teacher, and the daughter of composer Ernest Boulanger. Despite her brief life, which ended at the young age of twenty-four due to chronic illness, Lili's contributions to music have left a lasting impact.
Critics and scholars have lauded her works for their harmonic language, formal control, and emotional depth. Among her notable compositions are the three psalms for chorus and orchestra, the song-cycle Clairières dans le ciel, and the diptych D'un soir triste and D'un matin de printemps. Other significant pieces include the Vieille prière bouddhique, Pie Jesu, and her Prix de Rome cantata Faust et Hélène.