Conversations
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Louis-Gabriel Guillemain, Jean-Baptiste Quentin
Genre:
Chamber
Label: Alpha
Magazine Review Date: 06/2016
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 74
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: ALPHA235
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Concerto à quatre parties |
Jean-Baptiste Quentin, Composer
Jean-Baptiste Quentin, Composer Nevermind |
Quatour Sonata 3 |
Jean-Baptiste Quentin, Composer
Jean-Baptiste Quentin, Composer Nevermind |
(6) Sonates en quatuor, Movement: Sonata No 3 |
Louis-Gabriel Guillemain, Composer
Louis-Gabriel Guillemain, Composer Nevermind |
Sonata IV à quatre parties |
Jean-Baptiste Quentin, Composer
Jean-Baptiste Quentin, Composer Nevermind |
(6) Sonates en quatuor, Movement: Sonata No 4 |
Louis-Gabriel Guillemain, Composer
Louis-Gabriel Guillemain, Composer Nevermind |
Sonata V en trio |
Jean-Baptiste Quentin, Composer
Jean-Baptiste Quentin, Composer Nevermind |
Author: Julie Anne Sadie
Both Quentin and Guillemain were professional violinists, one at the Paris Opéra, the other at the court of Louis XV, yet in their sonates à quatre parties they give the first of the upper parts to a flute, the second to a violin. By French tradition – and in Telemann’s 12 ‘Paris Quartets’ (1730, 1738) – the third was allocated to a bass viol rather than a quinte (viola), the fourth to a cello and/or harpsichord. Not quite string quartets as we know them, and unlike the earliest, all three upper parts engage here in ‘conversation’. Quentin’s (after 1729, 1740) appeared in print at much the same time as Telemann’s, and Guillemain’s slightly later (1743, 1756).
Nevermind’s CD begins and ends with movements from Quentin’s delightful Op 12 Concerto à quatre parties that charmingly illustrate conversational rapport. Stylistically, Quentin’s music has much in common with that of his Italianate contemporary Jean-Marie Leclair. Listeners please note that the Op 10 (No 5) Sonata is in three parts only and dominated by the flute.
The first of the two Guillemain sonatas included on the CD owes something to Rameau’s Pièces de clavecin en concerts (1741), though the harpsichord is less prominent here, taking only one line rather than two. The Larghetto is leisurely and atmospheric; the Allegro finale stormy. The opening Allegro of the second sonata (1756) is also turbulent – more Sturm und Drang – while the Aria gratioso reverts to conversation with a lovely filigree realisation of the bass from Jean Rondeau. Indeed, the playing throughout the disc is first rate, and in Guillemain Nevermind pip Ensemble Barockin’ at the post.
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