Jean-Philippe Rameau

Jean-Philippe Rameau (25 September 1683 - 12 September 1764) was one of the most important French composers and music theorists of the Baroque era. He replaced Jean-Baptiste Lully as the dominant composer of French opera, and was attacked by those who preferred Lully's style. Rameau’s music is characterised by the exceptional technical knowledge of a composer who wanted above all to be renowned as a theorist of the art. Nevertheless it is not solely addressed to the intelligence and Rameau himself claimed “I try to conceal art with art”. The paradox of this music was that it was new, using techniques never known before, but it took place within the framework of old-fashioned forms; Rameau appeared revolutionary to the Lullystes, disturbed by the complex harmony of his music, and reactionary to the “philosophes” who only paid attention to its content and who either would not or could not listen to the sound it made. The incomprehension he received from his contemporaries stopped Rameau repeating such daring experiments as the second Trio des Parques in Hippolyte et Aricie, which he was forced to remove after a handful of performances because the singers were unable to interpret it correctly. So the greatest harmonist of his era went unrecognised at the very time that harmony - the “vertical” aspect of music - was taking precedence over counterpoint, which represented its “horizontal” aspect. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.

baroque Classical french early music composers



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The Arts and the Hours
La Poule
L'Entretien des Muses
Ouverture
La Livri
La Laborde
Air de mussette
Suite in G Major, RCT 6: No. 14, Les sauvages - Arr. for Solo Cello - Nouvelles suites de pièces de clavecin
Tambourin
I. Allemande
Sarabande
L'Indifferente / Indifference
Act III Scene 1: Ritournelle et Air (Pollux)
Les Indes galantes, RCT 44 / Entrée IV: Danse des sauvages
Les Boréades, RCT 31, Acte IV, Scène IV: Entrée pour les Muses, les Zéphyres, les Saisons, les Heures et les Arts
Rigaudons I, II & Double
Les Cyclopes
La Dauphine
La Villageoise
Air vif
Suite en Mi, Deuxieme livre: X. Tambourin
Le rappel des oiseaux
Pieces de clavecin: Suite in E minor: III. Gigue en rondeau I
Les Niais de Sologne
Les Tendres Plaintes
Nouvelles Suites De Pieces De Clavesin, 1728 - (Allemande)
Rondeau gracieux
V. La Follette (Rondeau)
Deuxieme livre, Suite en Mi: X. Tambourin
Les Sauvages
Ritournelle
Castor et Pollux, RCT 32, Acte I, Scène III: Prélude - Air accompagné Tristes apprêts
II. Les Niais de Sologne and two Doubles
Tristes apprêts, pâles flambeaux
Les Indes Galantes - Musette En Rondeau
Tristes Apprets..
Rigaudons 1, 2 & Double
Rameau: Nouvelles Suites de Pièces de Clavecin (1727), Suite in G Major, RCT 6: No. 3. Menuet I - Menuet II
La naissance d'Osiris: Premier et deuxieme tambourin
Les Boréades, Acte IV, Scène IV: Entrée pour les Muses, les Zéphyres, les Saisons, les Heures et les Arts
Gavotte
Rameau: Hippolyte et Aricie, RCT 43, Act 3 Scene 1: Prélude
Musette en rondeau
Suite en La: Les Trois Mains
Les Indes galantes, RCT 44, Nouvelle entrée, Les sauvages, Scène VI: Rondeau - Duo et choeur Forêts paisibles
La naissance d'Osiris: Overture
Rameau: Les Indes galantes, Quatrième entrée Les sauvages: Forêts paisibles (Zima, Adario, Sauvages)
Suite en ré: Les Niais de Sologne
Menuets I & II
Les Tourbillons

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