Rameau

5 Posts
archive-post-image
Solo or Ensemble: Rameau’s Pièces de clavecin en concert
When one door closes, another opens, and so it was for Rameau. Shortly after his opera Dardanus was given its premiere at the Opèra, Rameau quarrelled with the management of the theatre and so from 1740 to 1744, he wrote
Read more
archive-post-image
Rameau – Castor et Pollux
Castor et Pollux, Acte I, Scène 5: “Chantons l’éclatante victoire” (Choeur de Spartiates) From Rameau – Castor et Pollux (2015) Released by Harmonia Mundi Rameau: Castor et Pollux, Acte I, Scène 5: “Chantons l’éclatante victoire” (Choeur de Spartiates)At the height
Read more
archive-post-image
The Isaac Newton of Music
Rameau and his Treatise on Harmony
Jean-Philippe Rameau: Dardanus “Overture” Jean-Philippe Rameau was deeply in love with Marie-Louise Mangot. She must have been a remarkably charming, and extremely pretty 19-year old maiden. After all, a 42-year old bachelor does not give up his solitude all that
Read more
archive-post-image
The Enlightened Revolutionary
Jean-Philippe Rameau
Voltaire rightfully called Jean-Philippe Rameau (1683-1764) “le premier musicien de France.” Simultaneously looking backward and forward over French musical history, Rameau’s compositions uniquely capture the spirit of the Enlightenment. In all, Rameau published four books of keyboard music. The collections
Read more
archive-post-image
Extreme Privacy
Jean-Philippe Rameau and Marie-Louise Mangot
Jean-Philippe Rameau: Hippolyte et Aricie, “Ou suis-je?” Jean-Philippe Rameau was extremely tall and thin, “more like a ghost than a man.” He had a sharp chin, no stomach, flutes for legs and his eagle profile was aesthetically so attractive that
Read more