Poeticall Musicke : Majestie.
Late renaissance and early baroque music, historically performed.
Lecçons de Ténèbres, literally 'lessons of darkness', are perhaps the most
mystical and alluring pieces that have survived the mid-Baroque. When performed
in church during Holy Week, the Tenebrae service uses the text from the
Lamentations of Jeremiah and applies it allegorically to three days of mourning
for Christ between his crucifixion and resurrection. However, Leçons de
Ténèbres were much more private and intimate constructions, often being
performed in Louis XIV's rooms at Versailles before being aired in his chapel.
One particularly famous anecdote features de Lalande's fifteen-year- old
daughter performing the Leçons de Ténèbres for the King in his living room;
she went on to become the talk of Paris.
A contemporary of Lully and François Couperin, de Lalande was born in Paris in
1657 and, in addition to teaching music to the daughters of Louis XIV, was
director of the chapel royal from 1714 until 1726 when he died in Versailles.
Couperin was also born in Paris and was originally taught music by his father
Charles. He had a productive and successful musical career which gained him two
titles: firstly in 1693 he succeeded his organ teacher Thomelin and became
'Organiste du Roi'; then in 1717 he was also bestowed a composer's title
'Ordinaire de la musique de la chambre du Roi'. He died in 1733.
Leçons de Ténèbres follow a unique form with Latin verses written
predominantly in a controlled French recitative and air style, sometimes
interspersed with Hebrew letters creating melismatic and almost instrumental
moments in the vocal part.
"The French in their airs aim at the soft, the easie, the flowing, and coherent:
the whole air is of the same tone, or if sometimes they venture to vary it, they
do it with so many preparations, they so qualifie it, that still the air seems
to be as natural and consistent as if they had attempted no change at all; there
is nothing bold and adventurous in it; it's all equal and of a piece. ... The
French would think themselves undone, if they offended in the least against the
rules; they flatter, tickle, and court the ear, and are still doubtful of
success, tho' ev'ry thing be done with an exact regularity."
François Raguenet 'Comparison between the French and Italian Music and Operas'
(1702)
Most settings of the Leçons are scored for solo voice and basso continuo,
though there are many examples (including Couperin's third published Leçon)
that do not follow that trend. Sadly we only have three surviving Leçons, of an
original nine (three for each day of mourning), from both de Lalande and
Couperin. Although sometimes harmonically indulgent, the music itself is
meditative and introspective, offering a highly intimate and enlightening
experience.
"Sometimes we meet with a swelling, to which the first notes of the thoroughbass
jar so harshly, as the ear is highly offended with it; but the bass, continuing
to play on, returns at last to the swelling with such beautiful intervals, that
we quickly discover the composer's design in the choice of those dischords, was
to give the hearer a more true and perfect relish of the ravishing notes that on
a sudden restore the whole harmony.
Let a Frenchman be set to sing one of these dissonances, and he'll want courage
enough to support it with the resolution wherewith it must be sustain'd to make
it succeed; his ear, being accustom'd to the most soft and natural intervals, is
startled at such irregularity; he trembles and is in a sweat whilst he attempts
to sing it."
Jean Laurent le Cerf de La Vieville 'Good Taste in Music' (1704)
Music performed perhaps more often than the Leçons de Ténèbres in Louis XIV's
court included regular chamber concerts. Court composers like Couperin would
write music especially for such occasions: he and his colleagues would perform a
concert there every Sunday. Couperin tells us in his preface that the Concerts
Royaux were specifically written for these concerts. The suites were composed
between the period 1714-15 and then published in 1722 with a preface from
Couperin that confirmed the versatility of these pieces: he writes 'They are
suitable not only for the harpsichord, but also the violin, the flute, the oboe,
the viol, and the bassoon.'
Couperin then supplemented this published collection in 1724 with another set of
suites called Les Gouûts Réuünis ou Nouveaux Councerts ('The Reunited [French
and Italian] Styles or New Concerts').
Alex McCartney, February 2014
Songs:
1. Premier Concert Royal (Francois Couperin)
2. Troisieme Lecon pour le Mercredy Saint (Francois Couperin)
3. Deuxieme Concert Royal (Francois Couperin)
4. Troisieme Lecon pour le Vendredy Saint (Francois Couperin)
5. Troisieme Concert Royal (Francois Couperin)
Listen to: the entire album.
License Late renaissance and early baroque music, historically performed by Poeticall Musicke for your project.
Play the music of Poeticall Musicke in your restaurant or store.
Release date: 01/02/2016
Poeticall Musicke lives in York England
Tagged as: Classical, Baroque, Chamber Music, Harpsichord, Classical Singing, Composer: Francois Couperin, Recorder, Viola da Gamba
Recommended albums:- Soyes Loyal by Asteria: late-medieval vocal and instrumental music
- Hidden Sky by Jami Sieber: enchanting cello compositions
- 8 by Barks and Crock: Berlin based electronic music - from ambient atmospheric to dance
- JS Bach on the Lute by Paul Berget: renaissance lute, modernized.
- Deux Grands Maitres de l'Ecriture pour le Luth Baroque et le Theorbe by Mauricio Buraglia: a marvelous classical spiral of lute sounds
- Luis Milan - El Maestro by Edward Martin: vihuela, renaissance and baroque lute
- Lautenschmaus by Daniel Shoskes: A feast of Baroque lute
- Medieval and Traditional Carols, Chansons and Festive Dances by In Nova Cantica: carols and chansons from the 13th - 17th Centuries for dancing, festivities and mayhem
- Dark Harpsichord Music by Colin Booth: solo harpsichord music
- Rondeau Melancolique by Alex McCartney: Reflective, historically-informed performance on the lute
- Hans Neusidler, Ein newes Lautenbuechlein by Jacob Heringman: renaissance lute
- Allemande by Edward Martin: vihuela, renaissance and baroque lute
- Conversations Galantes by Ensemble Mirable: rare and extraordinary music of the Baroque
- William Byrd for Guitar by Daniel Estrem: colorful classical guitar
- The Art of the Lute Player by Jacob Heringman: renaissance lute
- JS Bach Goldberg Variations by Colin Booth: solo harpsichord music
- New Jazz Galaxy by Jive Ass Sleepers: chilled out grooves & uptempo funkathons
- Versailles et Dresde les Cours du Roi Luth by Mauricio Buraglia: a marvelous classical spiral of lute sounds
- La Superbe by Thomas Walker: Lute music of 17th century France and Italy
- Colors of Spain Volume 2 by Daniel Estrem: colorful classical guitar
Downloads:
- MP3: High quality MP3 variable-bit-rate files. Most people download these: they are audiophile files that play everywhere.
- ALAC: Perfect quality Apple Lossless format files. If you use iTunes or an iPod, get these. They're an exact audio copy of the original CD, and include the CD artwork and artist info. This is the same format as High Definition audio provided by the iTunes store.
- AAC: High quality Apple Audio Codec files. If you use iTunes or an iPod, these files sound great and include CD art and artist info. This is the standard format provided by the iTunes music store.
- WAV: Perfect quality WAV files. This format works everywhere, and is an exact audio copy of the original CD. It sounds fantastic. Album art and artist info is unfortunately not possible with this format.
- FLAC Perfect quality open source FLAC files. This is an open source audio format. It is an exact copy of the original CD, and includes CD artwork and artist info. Works great on Linux, VLC and many audio players based on open source.
- OGG: High quality open source OGG files. This is an open source audio format. It is a compressed (smaller file size) version of the original CD, and includes CD artwork and artist info. Works great on Linux, VLC and many audio players based on open source.
- 128k: Medium quality 128K MP3 files. These are medium audio quality MP3 files that will work on every device. The audio quality is good enough for most uses. These files are intended for cases where you want to conserve disk space.