On the trip over he met the painter Marcel Duchamp, who suggested that he forget Fontainebleau and head straight for Paris. The instruction at Fontainebleau proved, in fact, routine. Copland's composition teacher, Paul Vidal, struck him as a French Rubin Goldmark: ‘He is a man with Mr Goldmark's tastes, and was therefore quite satisfied with the stuff I showed him and played for him,’ he wrote to his parents. ‘However, he is not the sort of man I shall want to study with, when I get to Paris in the winter.’ The students, furthermore, were ‘not a very talented bunch, since most of the Jews were scared away.’ But the town of Fontainebleau had its charms and Copland was able to work on his French. Moreover, he made a few friends (including future Cleveland music critic Herbert Elwell), took some conducting lessons, and, most important, met Nadia Boulanger, with whom he would study for three years in Paris.