MARC-ANTOINE CHARPENTIER Messe & Te Deum à huit voix
Le Concert Spirituel Hervé Niquet
GCD 921611
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Performing artists
Le Concert SpirituelHervé Niquet, director
Stéphanie Revidat Hanna Bayodi François-Nicolas Geslot Anders J. Dahlin Emiliano Gonzalez-Toro Sébastien Droy Benoît Arnould Renaud Delaigue
Production details
Playing time: 79'33 Recorded at Église Notre Dame du Liban (Paris), in September 2005 Engineered by Manuel Mohino Produced by Dominique Daigremont Executive producer: Carlos Céster Booklet essay by Thomas Leconte (Centre de Musique Baroque de Versailles) Design 00:03:00 oficina tresminutos English - Français - Deutsch - Español
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MARC-ANTOINE CHARPENTIER (1643-1704)
Messe & Te Deum à huit voix
1-27 à 8 voix et 8 violons et flûtes [H.3] 28-40 Te Deum à 8 voix avec flûtes et violons [H.145]
About this CD
Mr Charpentier benefited greatly by his three years in Rome, as demonstrated by his entire oeuvre. (Mercure galant, February 1681) Towards 1670 Marc-Antoine Charpentier returned from Rome following a sojourn of more or less five years, his ears and mind brimming with ultramontane music and culture. No sooner did he come back to Paris, where he was born in 1643 and where his skills arrived ahead of him, than Charpentier found considerable support amongst advocates of the Italian aesthetic who were themselves in contact with the leading centres of learning in Rome. For a decade or so after his arrival in Paris, Charpentier was a regular contributor to the Saint-Louis Jesuits, who commissioned him to produce great two-choir compositions including the Mass for 8 voices and 8 violins and flutes [H.3] and the Te Deum for 8 voices with flutes and violins [H.145], which figure amongst the composer's most impressive and lavish works. These masterly works of his youth, bearing out highly skilful composition, convey the foundations of a musical language that was already very agile and personal, a language that was to assert itself in the course of the composer's career and mark his contemporaries. Composers in his wake, such as Michel-Richard de Lalande and Henry Desmarest, even went so far as to incorporate the double Italian choir with two orchestras into the quintessentially French genre of the great motet.