Joseph Valette de Montigny Videos
französischer Komponist
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Ensemble Antiphona Joseph Valette Montigny 2021
Provided to YouTube by PIAS Motet Salvum me fac Deus: Duo de haute-contre et basse-taille et chœur "Laudabo nomen Dei" · Ensemble Antiphona · Rolandas Muleika · Timothé Bougon · David Tricou Montigny: Grands Motets ℗ Paraty Released on: 2021-06-25 Conductor: Rolandas Muleika Baritone Vocals: Timothé Bougon Musical Ensemble: Ensemble Antiphona Composer: Joseph Valette de Montigny Auto-generated by YouTube.
Ensemble Antiphona Joseph Valette Montigny 2021
Provided to YouTube by PIAS Motet Surge propera: Symphonie, récit de taille et chœur "Surge propera Sion filia" · Ensemble Antiphona · Rolandas Muleika · Pierre Perny Montigny: Grands Motets ℗ Paraty Released on: 2021-06-25 Conductor: Rolandas Muleika Baritone Vocals: Pierre Perny Musical Ensemble: Ensemble Antiphona Composer: Joseph Valette de Montigny Auto-generated by YouTube.
Joseph Valette Montigny Ensemble Antiphona 2019 2021
Captation réalisée en août 2019, église Saint-Pierre de Charteux de Toulouse Captation et réalisation : Nora Fodil Extraits de l'album "Grands Motets de Joseph Valette de Montigny", 2021, Paraty @Ensemble Antiphona
Camille Saint Saëns Montigny Rémaury Montigny Robert Casadesus Louis Diémer Couperin Rameau Ravel 1886 1912 1926 1929
Camille Saint-Saëns was something of an anomaly among French composers of the nineteenth century in that he wrote in virtually all genres, including opera, symphonies, concertos, songs, sacred and secular choral music, solo piano, and chamber music. He was generally not a pioneer, though he did help to revive some earlier and largely forgotten dance forms, like the bourée and gavotte. He was a conservative who wrote many popular scores scattered throughout the various genres: the Piano Concerto No. 2, Symphony No. 3 ("Organ"), the symphonic poem Danse macabre, the opera Samson et Dalila, and probably his most widely performed work, The Carnival of The Animals. While he remained a composer closely tied to tradition and traditional forms in his later years, he did develop a more arid style, less colorful and, in the end, less appealing. He was also a poet and playwright of some distinction. The left-hand Op 135 Études are distinctive and in a world removed from the other two sets of Études. Caroline de Serres née Montigny-Rémaury was Saint-Saëns’ duet partner and the dedicatee of his ‘waltz-caprice’ Wedding Cake, Op 76, a gift for her second wedding in 1886. In 1912 her right hand was operated on and she requested a set of studies for her left hand alone. Robert Casadesus, in conversation with Dean Elder, tells a different story. He was under the impression that Saint-Saëns had written the Études for the best students of his good friend Louis Diémer, the dedicatee of Franck’s Variations symphoniques. Because Casadesus was the teacher’s pet (chou chou), Diémer gave him the Bourrée, considered the best piece of the set. He played it for Saint-Saëns himself. One wonders how Saint-Saëns reacted! That grande-dame of French playing, Jeanne-Marie Darré, who played all five Saint-Saëns Concertos in one evening in 1926, described Saint-Saëns as “very boorish, you know, not amiable”. For Opus 135 Saint-Saëns becomes neo-Classical, recreating old dance forms from harpsichord suites, inspired by his lifelong interest in the works of Couperin and Rameau. These are unpretentious pieces, but beautifully textured and intelligently designed. They were avidly studied by Ravel before he wrote his Concerto pour la main gauche. The Prélude, in G major, gently contrasts arpeggiated chords and sustained melodic fragments. The Alla fuga continues in the same key. Thankfully, its strutting subject is only taken up by one other voice, but the two attain a stretto on the final page and achieve quite a lot of contrast on their ‘flight’. The Moto perpetuo which follows is marked ‘softly and calmly, without speed and very evenly’. It would be easier to play faster—but therein lies the challenge! Its gentle ups and downs innocently explore different keys and registers, reaching a forte climax before evaporating. Then to the vigorous Bourrée with its middle section a forty-eight-bar G pedal point! The Élégie is decked in entirely different garb from the other five pieces. Its probing Romantic phrases contrast curiously with its surroundings. The second section does recall the opening Prélude with its arpeggiated chords, but there the connections end. It must have been this piece which Ravel found so helpful in 1929. It is quite lovely. The Gigue, though, provides a predictably presto conclusion, with occasional rhythmic displacements for spark and a witty descent at the end Source: Allmusic ((http•••) Although originally composed for piano, I created this interpretation of the Alla Fuga from 6 Études pour la Main Gauche (Op. 135 No. 2) for Viola Duet.
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