DELALANDE Symphonies pour les Soupers du Roy
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Michel-Richard Delalande
Genre:
Orchestral
Label: Challenge Classics
Magazine Review Date: 07/2015
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 61
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: CC72664

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Caprice No 1 'Caprice de Villers-Cotterets' |
Michel-Richard Delalande, Composer
Elbipolis Baroque Orchestra of Hamburg Jürgen Groß, Conductor Michel-Richard Delalande, Composer |
Symphonies pour les soupers du Roy, Movement: 1st Suite |
Michel-Richard Delalande, Composer
Elbipolis Baroque Orchestra of Hamburg Jürgen Groß, Conductor Michel-Richard Delalande, Composer |
Symphonies pour les soupers du Roy, Movement: 2nd Suite |
Michel-Richard Delalande, Composer
Elbipolis Baroque Orchestra of Hamburg Jürgen Groß, Conductor Michel-Richard Delalande, Composer |
Symphonies pour les soupers du Roy, Movement: 3rd Suite |
Michel-Richard Delalande, Composer
Elbipolis Baroque Orchestra of Hamburg Jürgen Groß, Conductor Michel-Richard Delalande, Composer |
Grande Piece 'Fantaisie ou Caprice que le Roy demandoit souvent' |
Michel-Richard Delalande, Composer
Elbipolis Baroque Orchestra of Hamburg Jürgen Groß, Conductor Michel-Richard Delalande, Composer |
Caprice No 3 |
Michel-Richard Delalande, Composer
Elbipolis Baroque Orchestra of Hamburg Jürgen Groß, Conductor Michel-Richard Delalande, Composer |
Author: Julie Anne Sadie
The immensely able Elbipolis Barockorchester Hamburg is led by the violinist Jürgen Gross, who takes several solo turns, but others – including the bassoonist Katrin Lazar, theorbist Ophira Zakai and percussionist Michael Metzler – also deliver stylish performances, with particular respect to Jacobi’s arrangements. This is their first recording of French music and is characterised by delicacy, warmth and clarity.
Delalande, the contemporary of Marais, La Guerre and Couperin, was esteemed above all others, recognised and richly rewarded by Louis XIV. Unlike them, he saw none of his music into print, so his wishes must in part be inferred from the practices of his contemporaries. At odds with those practices are Jacobi’s decisions to compose frequent contreparties for the bassoon (rather than a bass viola da gamba) as in trs 4, 11, 21 and 26, and, further, to pair it with violin as in trs 11, 21 and 22 (rather than with a cello or viol in the petit choeur passages; the usual practice was to pair it with oboe). Jacobi may have taken encouragement from the posthumous manuscript I consulted: exceptionally, in the Grande Pièce (tr 11), when the bass part divides in two the parts are marked ‘bassons’. His arrangement of the ‘Loure’ (tr 14) achieves a lovely haze that evokes the sound of a musette (French bagpipe); the addition of sopranino recorders in trs 3, 10 and 27 is festive. Nonetheless, caveat emptor.
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