Louis
XV was born in 1710 in Versailles. In 1715 at the age of five he succeeded
to the throne of France upon the death of his great-grandfather, Louis XIV. He
inherited a court notable for its brilliant accomplishments in the arts and
literature. A distinct musical style had evolved at Louis XIV’s court,
principally developed by such composers as Lully, Marais and Lalande.
Charpentier, working outside of the court, also contributed to the style. Among
the musicians and composers at Louis XIV’s court who continued to work under
Louis XV was the flutist, Michel de la Barre (c.1675-1745).
About the time
of La Barre’s birth, the transverse flute underwent two important changes.
Before then, the flute had a cylindrical bore and had no keys (levers) to close
holes beyond the reach of the fingers. However, around 1670 flute-makers in
France as well in the Netherlands added a key, thus enabling the flute for the
first time to play every note of the chromatic scale. At the same time the
interior bore was redesigned from a cylindrical shape to conical (tapering from
the head to the foot of the flute), thus increasing tonal power and improving
intonation. This flute we now call the Baroque flute.
Much of the
music which La Barre composed was for the Baroque transverse flute. Moreover, he
is given credit for having published the first solo flute music for this
newly-designed flute. In 1702 Christophe Ballard printed La Barre’s Opus 4,
Pieces pour la flute traversiere avec la basse-continue, containing five suites.
These are the first solo works published anywhere for the new one-keyed conical
flute. La Barre was fully aware of his achievement; in the introduction to the
Opus 4 publication, he states that these pieces are the first to appear for that
kind of flute. La Barre may thus be regarded as a seminal figure of the modern
flute repertoire.
La Barre was a
member of the king’s chamber music (Chambre du Roy) and under Louis XIV had
also played in the Academie Royale de Musique. In fulfilling his interest in
composition, he wrote instrumental trios, suites for flute and continuo,
original vocal airs, and two works for the stage. However, it was as a composer
of flute duets that he excelled. From 1709 until 1725, he published a total of
19 multi-movement duets for two flutes. Nine of these duets appeared in the
years 1709-14 under the reign of Louis XIV and, following a hiatus of seven
years, the remaining ten were published 1721-25 during the Regency and
subsequent reign of Louis XV. It is these latter ten which are recorded here for
the first time. Probably not all of the ten duets published 1721-25 were
composed during those four years. It is unlikely that La Barre ceased composing
just because of the death of Louis XIV. Publication dates may not necessarily be
the same as composition dates.
When these ten
duets were published, Louis XV was between the ages of eleven and fifteen. Some
notable personal events occurred to him during these years. In October of 1722,
he was officially crowned. On his 13th birthday, February 15, 1723,
he attained his legal majority, and the Regency under Philippe d’Orleans was
dissolved. In September of 1725 at age 15, Louis XV was married to Maria,
daughter of the exiled King of Poland. Young Louis was indeed off to a
precocious start.
Although La
Barre’s flutist-colleague, Jacques Hotteterre le Romain, was the first in
France to publish duets for a pair of unaccompanied flutes (Le Fargis and a
rondeau, Le Champestre, 1708), it was La Barre who most thoroughly explored the
possibilities of two flutes without accompaniment and who truly established the
genre. His first three suites for two flutes (1709, 1710, 1711) each contain
eight movements. Commencing with his fourth suite in 1711, all of his duets for
two flutes are in four movements. The four-movement suites continue the
tradition of combining abstract movements such as prelude, fugue, rondeau,
fantaisie and caprice with dance movements such as gigue, gavotte, rigaudon and
allemande. Of the ten duets of 1721-25, eight are called suites and the two in
the 9th book are called sonates. These sonates are virtually
identical in format and style to the suites. Why would La Barre call them
sonates? Each of the eight suites is in a different key. The sonates are in
duplicate keys (B-flat major and G major) to two of the suites. Perhaps La Barre
designated them as sonates to distinguish them from these suites.
La Barre’s ten
duets of 1721-25 explore a wealth of musical ideas. Consisting of short
movements which are mostly in binary form, they are written with consummate
assurance and skill. His melodies are well-conceived and his handling of harmony
fully mature. An example of his musical sophistication is that a number of
movements begin with rare five-bar themes: the Gigue of the 1st Sonate in B-flat
major, the Rigaudon of the C major Suite, the Prelude of the Suite in B minor.
The 1st Rondeau of the Suite 21 in D major begins with a seven-bar
theme. Less accomplished composers would be satisfied with standard four- and
eight-bar themes. The duets also ably demonstrate La Barre’s thorough
understanding of the special sonic characteristics of two flutes playing
simultaneously.
The performers
on this recording play on replicas of flutes which are historically appropriate
for the 1720s in France. John Solum plays on Friedrich von Huene’s copy of an
Hotteterre boxwood and ivory flute. Richard Wyton plays on a boxwood and ivory
replica of a Chevalier flute made by Thomas Prescott. Both flutes are pitched at
about A-392, which is today called French pitch, appropriate for this music.
Modern pitch is about a whole tone above this pitch. The flutists based this
recording on an original first-edition of the printed music, owned by Solum.
This includes the only surviving copy of La Barre’s 11th Book of
1724 containing the 18th and 19th suites.
John
Solum,
flutist, made his debut as soloist with the Philadelphia Orchestra and has since
appeared as soloist and chamber music player in 37 countries. He is
internationally known for his recordings of more than 80 works for flute and has
appeared at major music festivals throughout the world. His many editions of
music are published by Oxford University Press.
Richard
Wyton,
flutist, made his professional debut at the age of twelve, singing a role with
the New York City Opera. As a flutist he has performed coast-to-coast on both
modern and historical instruments at universities and concert societies. He has
appeared as soloist on National Public Radio and has recorded for Arabesque, CRI,
Epiphany, Innova, MSR Classics and MMO.
THE
HANOVERIAN ENSEMBLE is a group of distinguished
musicians who specialize in historical performance on period instruments. Their
programs feature the great music of the Baroque and Classical eras, performed
with an expertise garnered from many decades of concert and recording
experience. The ensemble’s name evokes the time of the Hanoverian kings of
England who prospered in the years 1714-1837.