diumenge, 12 de setembre del 2021

DE BROSSARD, Sébastien (1655-1730) - Stabat Mater (1702)

Hans Holbein The Younger (1497-1543) - The Holy Family (1519)


Sébastien de Brossard (1655-1730) - Stabat Mater (1702)
Performers: Ensemble Éclats de France

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French priest, theorist, composer, lexicographer and bibliophile. He was descended from a family founded by Antoine de Brossard (c.1286-?), a natural son of Charles de Valois and Hélène Broschart, daughter of the king's treasurer. Sébastien was the last of a family of glass-blowers from lower Normandy. He studied at the Jesuit college in Caen and then attended that city's famous university, studying philosophy for two years and theology for three. When he turned to music, therefore, he was self-taught; he studied the lute, copying and composing pieces for the instrument. He took minor orders in 1675 and became a sub-deacon the next year, but the date when he became a priest is not known, nor is the date of his arrival in Paris. He was living there in 1678, when he published a secular piece in the Mercure galant under the name of Robsard des Fontaines. He was thus working methodically on his music, but still with books as his only teachers. He never found a permanent post in Paris. In May 1687 he was appointed a vicar at Strasbourg Cathedral, and soon afterwards became maître de chapelle there, when the musician who had been offered the post, Mathieu Fourdaux, did not take it up. In 1689, two years after his arrival in Strasbourg, the number of cathedral musicians was cut, since the chapter had suffered financial losses as a consequence of the war of the League of Augsburg. Brossard founded an Académie de Musique, where he directed concerts of secular music and French operas and ballets. During the time he spent in Strasbourg he wrote his two books of motets and six books of airs, including serious songs and drinking songs, and acquired a large part of the music books and scores in his library. In December 1698 Brossard left Strasbourg for Meaux, where he succeeded Pierre Tabart as maître de chapelle of the cathedral; he was made a canon in 1709. On 1 August 1715 he resigned as maître de chapelle in favour of a former pupil, Jean Cavignon, but he continued living in Meaux, where he was often consulted on theoretical questions. He died there and was buried in the cathedral. In 1724 Brossard, then entering his 70th year, feared that his large and valuable library of music would be dispersed on his death; he therefore offered it to the Bibliothèque Royale, asking for a ‘gratification’ in return. His offer was accepted, and the king's librarian asked Brossard for the catalogue as well as the collection itself. The collection is now in the Bibliothèque Nationale, together with the catalogue, which is more than simply a list of the books and scores in the canon's library; most of the entries have additional commentary, often providing information unavailable elsewhere.

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