Jordi Savall: Royal Concerts in the Baroque Versailles
Performers
Le Concert des Nations
Jordi Savall, Music Director and Bass Viol
Program
ANON. Concert donné a Louis XIII en 1627 (collected by Andre Danican Philidor)
·· Les ombres
·· Deuxième air pour les mêmes
·· Les suisses
·· Les suissesses
·· Les gascons
·· Entrée de Mr. de Liancourt
·· Les valets de las Faiste
·· Les nimphes de la grenouillere
·· Les bergers
·· Les amériquains
MARAIS Prelude in A from Pièces de viole, Book 3, No. 11
MARAIS Fêtes Champêtres from Pièces de viole, Book 4, No. 61
MARAIS L'Ameriquaine from Pièces de viole, Book 4, No. 68
MARAIS Muzette I from Pièces de viole, Book 4, No. 28
MARAIS Muzette II from Pièces de viole, Book 4, No. 29
MARAIS La sautillante from Pièces de viole, Book 4, No. 30
COUPERIN Troisième concert royal
RAMEAU Tambourin I et II from Pièces de clavecin en concert, Troisième concert
LECLAIR Sonata in D Major, Op. 2, No. 8
Event Duration
The printed program will last approximately 75 minutes with no intermission.Listen to Selected Works
At a Glance
As a young man, French composer François Couperin fell in love with the vivacious trio sonatas of Arcangelo Corelli and decided to try his hand at the newly popular Italianate style. Cognizant of “the harshness of French attitudes toward any kind of foreign innovation,” however, he took the precaution of bringing his first sonata out under the anagrammatic pseudonym Francesco Coperuni. In 1726, secure in his position as a pillar of the French musical establishment, he dusted off three of these youthful sonatas, combined them with newly composed music in the French manner, and published them under the aptly descriptive title Les Nations.
Tonight’s program by Le Concert des Nations—whose name evokes Couperin’s landmark collection—reflects a similar mélange of French and Italian tastes. Most of the composers represented were associated with the courts of Louis XIII and Louis XIV, whose love of music and dance—and lavish patronage—transformed 17th-century Paris into the musical capital of Europe. The selections range from courtly dances and virtuoso showpieces to intimate chamber music, with a special nod to the composer-violist Marin Marais, whose richly expressive music Jordi Savall helped bring to the attention of modern audiences via the soundtrack to the 1991 French film Tous les matins du monde.