dilluns, 31 de gener del 2022

DEVIENNE, François (1759-1803) - Sinfonie concertante [F] pour cor et basson (1785)

François Watteau, dit Watteau de Lille (1758-1823) - Le Bal de Tivoli

François Devienne (1759-1803) - Sinfonie concertante [F] pour cor et basson (1785)
Performers: Klаus Wаllendorf (horn); Kаrl-Otto Hаrtmаnn (bassoon);
Rundfundorchester Hannover; Wolf-Dieter Hauschild (conductor)

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French flautist, bassoonist, composer and teacher. He was the seventh of eight children born to Pierre Devienne and his second wife Marie Petit. Two obituaries published in 1803, which have since been proved apocryphal, claimed that when he was ten he wrote a mass which was performed by the musicians of the Royal Cravate cavalry regiment. He probably received his earliest training from the organist Morizot in Joinville, and continued his education with his elder brother and godfather, François Memmie, in Deux Ponts (now Zweibrücken) from 1776 to 1778. He left Deux Ponts on 15 May 1778 and may have spent some time with the Royal Cravate regiment during the following year. He joined the Paris Opéra orchestra as last chair bassoonist in autumn 1779 for one season, and studied the flute with the orchestra's principal flautist, Félix Rault. It is likely that Devienne entered the service of Cardinal de Rohan as a chamber musician in spring 1780 and remained there until mid-1785. In 1781 he joined the freemasons; he presumably became a member of the famous masonic orchestra, the Loge Olympique, during the 1780s. The first performance in Paris of a work by him was on 24 March 1780, when Ozi performed ‘a new Bassoon Concerto composed by de Vienne’ at the Concert Spirituel. Devienne first appeared in Paris as a soloist on 24 December 1782 at the Concert Spirituel when he performed ‘a new flute concerto’, probably his Flute Concerto no.1; his first appearance as a bassoon soloist at the Concert Spirituel was on 25 March 1784 when he played his Bassoon Concerto no.1. From 1782 to 1785 he performed at the Concert Spirituel as a soloist at least 18 times, but after 3 April 1785 he did not appear there for four years. From 1785 to 1789 his place of employment is uncertain; he may have been a member of the Swiss Guards Band in Versailles. Devienne probably returned to Paris in autumn or winter 1788. 

Les spectacles de Paris 1790 lists him as the second bassoonist of the Théâtre de Monsieur when it opened in January 1789 and by autumn 1790 he had advanced to principal bassoonist, a position he held until April 1801. Devienne's first known solo appearance after his return to Paris was at the Concert Spirituel on 7 April 1789, when he played the flute part in the première of his Sinfonie concertante no.4. In autumn 1790 he joined the military band of the Paris National Guard where his duties included teaching music to the children of French soldiers and participation in the musical events of the numerous festivals in Paris. This organization officially became the Free School of Music of the National Guard in 1792, and Devienne was one of the three sergeants in its administration. The marriage of Devienne to a Mlle Maillard presumably took place between 1789 and 1792; they had five children. The Théâtre Montansier, which devoted most of its productions to original French opéras comiques, opened on 12 April 1790 and Devienne's Le mariage clandestin was staged there the following November. Two more of his operas were staged before his most popular opera, Les visitandines (1792), was performed at the Théâtre Feydeau. This opera was among the most successful of the Revolutionary period; it had over 200 performances in Paris between 1792 and 1797 and was also performed there as late as 1920. Devienne's famous method for the one-key flute was published in 1794. On 12 April 1801 the Théâtre Feydeau abruptly closed. Its orchestra and that of the Théâtre Favart merged the following September to form the new Opéra-Comique orchestra, but it is not known if Devienne was a member of this orchestra. In May 1803 he entered Charenton, a Parisian home for the mentally ill, where he died the following September after a long illness which ended by impairing his reason.

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