JOSEPH BODIN DE BOISMORTIER Daphnis et Chloé
Le Concert Spirituel Hervé Niquet
GCD 921618
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Performing artists
Gaëlle Méchaly, soprano Marie-Louise Duthoit, soprano François-Nicolas Geslot, high tenor Till Fechner, bass Alain Buet, bass Renaud Delaigue, bass Arno Guillou, bass
Production details
Recorded at the Grande Salle of the Arsenal de Metz, France, in December 2001 Engineered by Manuel Mohino Produced by Dominique Daigremont Executive producer: Carlos Céster
Design: Valentín Iglesias (00:03:00) Booklet essay: Stéphan Perreau English Français Español Deutsch
This recording was first released in 2002 as Glossa GCD 921605
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Commercial release sheet (PDF)
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JOSEPH BODIN DE BOISMORTIER
Daphnis et ChloéPastorale. Paris, 1747
CD I 45:38
Prologue Acte Premier
CD II 55:44
Acte Deuxième Acte Troisième
About this CD
Following on from Callirhoé (André Cardinal Destouches), Sémélé (Marin Marais) and Proserpine (Jean-Baptiste Lully), three important tragédies lyriques rescued from oblivion by Hervé Niquet and Le Concert Spirituel, Glossa is now restoring to the catalogue and within its collection of French Baroque opera, a recording made in Metz in December 2001: Daphnis et Chloé, the work which was to add Joseph Bodin de Boismortier to the roll call of the history of music in a most determined fashion.
First performed in Paris in 1747 – a time when the tragédie lyrique, the genre which Lully had brought to its peak, was already in evident decline – Daphnis et Chloé is a pastorale within which lurks a ballet with a bergère storyline, and which is blessed with a plot which, although mythological in content, is of great lightness; this neatly matched the taste of the nobility of the time and even more so that of Madame de Pompadour with its recreation of an idealized pastoral world. From the very beginning the music is reminiscent of that series of rural settings painted by Boucher for the king’s favourite, crammed full of smitten shepherds and besotted shepherdesses jostling for space on the canvas whilst big-bottomed and chubby-cheeked cupids are hanging about in the clouds… In just a few years time, in 1753, Paris was to become the setting for the flaring up of the notorious Querelle des Bouffons, with the supporters of the French tradition confronting the partisans of the Italian opera buffa. By then the taste for Boismortier’s music had gone stale... until now!