Ensemble Les Surprises (Juliette Perret (soprano), Étienne Bazola (baritone),
Sandra Latour, Matthieu Bertaud (transverse flute), Alice Julien-Laferrière,
Gabriel Ferry (violin), Juliette Guignard (viola da gamba), Marie-Amélie
Clément (double bass), Anaïs Ramage (bassoon), Étienne
Galletier (theorbo), Louis-Noël Bestion de Camboulas (harpsichord))/Juliette
Guignard, Louis-Noël Bestion de Camboulas
rec. 25-31 March 2013, Espace culturel C.J. Bonnet, Jujurieux, France. DDD
Well into the 20th century it was quite common that
sons followed in their fathers' footsteps and took over the family
business. The same happened in music, especially in the 17th and 18th centuries.
Many composers were the sons of musicians who also tendeed to be their first
teacher. We know several dynasties of musicians and composers, such as the
Bach family in Germany and the Hotteterres and Couperins in France. This
disc is devoted to two members of another, albeit slightly smaller dynasty.
Today Jean-Fery is the only fairly well-known member of the Rebel family.
He was the son of Jean Rebel (c.1636-1692), a singer who entered the royal
chapel in 1661. In this capacity he took part in performances of several
of Jean-Baptiste Lully's operas. Five of his children became musicians,
among them Anne-Renée, also a singer, and Jean-Fery. He was educated
as a violinist and harpsichordist who from the age of eight received lessons
from Lully. In 1705 he was one of the violinists in the
24 Violons du
Roi and became
batteur de mesure in that ensemble as well
as in the orchestra of the Opéra. Later he gradually gave up his
positions in favour of his son François.
The latter became one of the most prominent composers for the theatre in
the 18th century. He was educated as a violinist and theorbo player, and
his first job was that of violinist in the orchestra of the Académie
Royale, alongside his lifelong friend François Francoeur. Their young
age - 13 and 15 respectively - resulted in their being called 'the
little violins'. They would cooperate life-long and produced many
operas. Until today it has been impossible to discern between the respective
contributions to their collective theatre pieces. If asked about that they
replied: "This piece is by both of us".
This disc sheds light on a widespread practice in the first half of the
18th century: the performance of large-scale pieces in pocket-size scoring
in the
salons of society's upper echelons. This was the
time of the Enlightenment, and part of it saw the expansion of the role
of non-aristocratic people in music life. This also saw the birth of the
chamber cantata for one or a couple of solo voices and a small number of
instruments. In addition extracts from operas were performed, both arias
and instrumental pieces. The Ensemble Les Surprises has followed this practice
by selecting pieces from three stage works by François Rebel and
François Francoeur:
Scanderberg (1735),
Ballet de la
paix (1738) and
Prince de Noisy (1749). One could argue that
one misses the dramatic context if arias are isolated from an opera, but
it is very likely that in the time such concerts took place the audience
had heard those pieces in the Opéra before and knew what they were
about.
The selection includes arias of various kinds, from pieces about (unhappy)
love to a storm scene (
Que les vents les plus doux). Obviously
the latter makes a much stronger effect if performed with a larger orchestra
as in the Opéra, but here it still makes a good impression, thanks
to the excellent playing of the ensemble. The more intimate pieces come
off even better, also due to the sensitive singing of Juliette Perret and
Étienne Bazola. We not only hear arias but also instrumental movements,
including the inevitable
chaconne. This was an element included
in every opera, mostly in the last act somewhere towards the end. Such chaconnes
belong to the most brilliant pieces of the French baroque.
The programme begins and closes with pieces by Jean-Fery. The first is
Les
Caractères de la danse, a sequence of 14 movements in which
the various dance forms of the time are on display. It is regrettable that
the individual movements - which have to be played
attacca - are
not listed in the booklet. These are, in order of appearance: prélude,
courante, menuet, bourrée, chaconne, sarabande, gigue, rigaudon,
passepied, gavotte, sonate, loure, musett and sonate.
Le Tombeau de
Monsieur de Lully is a trio sonata from a set of seven published in
1712. Here Rebel pays tribute to the
goût réuni, the
mixture of French and Italian styles. The form of the trio sonata was Italian
- modelled after Corelli - and so was the scoring for two violins and basso
continuo. Rebel constructed this piece as a kind of opera scene comprising
short contrasting movements with character indications in French. Towards
the end the piece includes tremolo passages before it closes with a return
to the opening section where short motifs express sadness about the death
of Lully, Rebel's main teacher. The incorporation of Italian elements
is not without irony, considering that the (Italian-born) Lully vehemently
opposed Italian influences all his life.
This is the debut disc of the Ensemble Les Surprises, and it is a very good
one. The choice of repertoire is partly the result of Louis-Noël Bestion
de Camboulas' research on François Rebel and François
Francoeur for which he also received an award. In the early 18th century
a programme like this took the form of a bouquet of pieces the audience
had probably already heard in the Opéra. Today it works the other
way round: it gives us the opportunity to become aquainted with music we
have probably never heard before, and that goes in particular for the operas
of Rebel and Francoeur. Their rediscovery is well-deserved. Very few are
available complete on disc as yet. Those who are interested in their operas
should investigate a recording
of
Zélindor and of
Pirame et Thisbé
(performed under the direction of Daniel Cuiller; Mirare, 2007). It would
be great if this disc inspires more recordings of their oeuvre.
Johan van Veen
http://www.musica-dei-donum.org
https://twitter.com/johanvanveen