dilluns, 20 de febrer del 2023

CHEDEVILLE, Nicolas (1705-1782) - Sonate (V) en do majeur (1737)

Govert Flinck (1615-1660) - Rembrandt as a Shepherd with a Staff and Flute (1636)


Nicolas Chédeville (1705-1782) - Sonate (V) en do majeur, opera XIII (1737)
Performers: The Suffolk Consort

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French composer, arranger, musette maker, player and teacher, brother of Pierre Chédeville (1694-1725) and Esprit Philippe Chédeville (1696-1762). His great uncle Louis Hotteterre was one of his godfathers and may have taught him music and the art of turning instruments. In the early 1720s he entered the opera orchestra as oboe and musette player, and on 1 November 1725 he took over the reversion of Jean Hotteterre's post in the Grands Hautbois from Esprit Philippe. After Jean's death in 1732, he acquired the title to this post. On 2 December 1729 he took out his first privilege to publish his own compositions. At first he called himself ‘Chedeville le jeune’ on the title-pages of these works; from op.3 he listed himself as ‘Chedeville le cadet’. The dedications of many of his works show that he was much sought after as a musette teacher by members of the most highly-placed families in France. He taught Princess Victoire from about 1750, which led to his appointment as maître de musette de Mesdames de France. In his musette making he seems to have added to the instrument's lower compass, building musettes going down to c' (according to the Mercure de France, November 1733). The Mercure also reported that he had rearranged the keys on the little chanter, making it easier to play. On 1 July 1748 he retired from the opera, although he agreed to return to play the musette there whenever he was needed, according to La Borde. Although he retained his post in the Grands Hautbois until his death, he must have dropped out of sight by 1780, because in that year La Borde, who claimed that he was the most celebrated musette player France had ever had, said that he was dead; in fact he lived for two more years. Nicolas's first two collections of pieces for musette or hurdy-gurdy, entitled Amusements champêtres (opp.1 and 2), are similar to his elder brother's early Simphonies; his op.3 works with the same title are more substantial and technically difficult. His op.6, inspired by a campaign on which he accompanied the Prince of Conti, contains movements with titles of battles, some of which express the ‘war-like images’ he referred to in his dedication. 

In 1737 he made a secret agreement with Jean-Noël Marchand for the latter to obtain a privilege to engrave, print and sell a work as Vivaldi's Il pastor fido, op.13, but in a notarial act dated 17 September 1749 Marchand declared that Chédeville was the composer, also revealing that Chédeville had provided the money for the publication and was receiving the emoluments. It is not certain why Chédeville chose to have his own work attributed to Vivaldi and issued under the privilege of Marchand, but perhaps, as Lescat has suggested, he was trying to give the musette, his favourite instrument, the endorsement of a great composer that it had lacked up until then. His interest in Italian music was strong around this time. On 7 August 1739 he was granted a privilege to print, engrave and issue to the public his own arrangements of concertos and sonatas by Italian composers for the musette, hurdy-gurdy or flute. The names of ten Italian composers are mentioned in the privilege, along with those of Quantz and Mahaut. Le printems, ou Les saisons amusantes (1739) features arrangements of Vivaldi's ‘La primavera’, op.8 no.1, along with other concerto movements by Vivaldi. His op.7 is his only collection specifically for the transverse flute, oboe or violin. The pieces have Italian tempo markings, a greater variety of keys than the musette works and more pronounced features of Italian style. In his op.9, dedicated to the ‘illustrious virtuosos’, both ladies and gentlemen, who were his students, he turned again to the rustic, pseudo-countrified style so fashionable at the time. Not arranged into sonatas or suites, the pieces appear to reflect the skill of the pupil to whom each is dedicated; some are quite simple, while others, such as ‘The Virtuoso’, use many ‘double stops’ and have rapid, difficult passage-work. Op.14, dedicated to Princess Victoire, features variations, incuding 12 based on ‘Les folies d'Espagne’. Though Nicolas's works are on the whole more substantial and glittering than those of Esprit Philippe, both were basically intended for the same purpose – that of the amusement of wealthy amateurs who played for their own pleasure – and both served that purpose well.

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