Composers

Charles Quef

Organ
Pump organ
Piano
Voice
French horn
Flute
Oboe
Clarinet
Bassoon
Piece
Melody
Song
Religious music
Rhapsodies
Carol
Communion
Mass
Fugue
Postlude
by popularity
12 Pieces for Organ, Op.362 Mélodies, Op.202 Pièces, Op.122 Rhapsodies sur des Thèmes Bretons, Op.293 Pieces for Organ, Op.233 Pieces for Organ, Op.444 Noëls, Op.265 Pieces for Organ, Op.115 Pieces for Organ, Op.32Communion, Op.74FugueImpressions religieuses, Volume 1, Op.54Impressions religieuses, Volume 2, Op.61Intérieur rustique, Op.3 No.1Pieces, Op.50Pieces, Op.51Pieces, Op.52Sortie sur 'Ite Missa est'Suite for Piano and Wind Quintet, Op.4
Wikipedia
Charles Paul Florimond Quef (1 November 1873, Lille – 2 July 1931, Paris) was a French organist and composer.
He studied at the conservatory in Lille, and later he attended the Paris Conservatory where he studied with Charles-Marie Widor, Louis Vierne and Alexandre Guilmant. From 1895 to 1898, he was organist of the Église Sainte-Marie-des-Batignolles and in 1898, organist of the Saint-Laurent church, Paris. In the same year, he was awarded the First prize for organ at the conservatory. Then he was appointed assistant organist and later, in November 1901, titular organist of the Église de la Ste.-Trinité, Paris, due to resignation of his predecessor Guilmant. He retained this post until his death in 1931.