Fauré entered the school of church music
École Niedermeyer de Paris in 1854, when he was nine years old. There he received training in piano, theory, composition, and classical languages. Weekly choir singing was part of the curriculum for all students. Fauré's teacher in advanced piano was
Camille Saint-Saëns, who encouraged him to compose. In 1861 Fauré participated in the first composition competition at the school. In 1863 he submitted a setting of
Psalm 137,
Super flumina Babylonis, for five vocal parts and orchestra. He received an award but no prize because he had not strictly adhered to all conditions. At age 19, in 1864–65, he composed
Cantique de Jean Racine, scored for four vocal parts and piano or organ and that time he received the first prize in the 1865 contest. Fauré's
Cantique was first performed on 4 August 1866 in a version with strings and organ, the organ played by the composer, when the new organ of the
Saint-Sauveur Montivilliers Abbey was dedicated.
César Franck, the dedicatee of the composition, conducted it, possibly the same version, in an orchestral concert on 15 May 1875. A version for a larger orchestra, with wind instruments but without organ, was possibly written by Fauré himself and first played on 28 January 1906, according to a program of the Société de concerts du Conservatoire. Neither of these orchestral versions were published.
Cantique was first published around 1875 or 1876, by Schoen in Paris, as part of the series
Echo des Maîtrises. In recent times, the accompaniment has been arranged for strings and harp by
John Rutter, to great acclaim. == Text and music ==