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Music at the Church of the SS Innocents, Paris, in the Late Eighteenth Century

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2020

Jack Eby*
Affiliation:
Bishop's University, Lennoxville, Quebec

Extract

That there was a lively tradition of French sacred choral music in the second half of the eighteenth century is a fact that has to some extent been obscured by the vivid personalities, the querelles, the wide public appeal and the overall vitality of the contemporary opera world. The French church, however, did support a nationwide system of choir schools (or maîtrises), and many establishments maintained music programmes of a size and excellence that reflected the church's wealth and taste.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Musical Association, 1992

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References

1 See ‘Mémoire des maîtres de musique servant à la chapelle du Roy’ (1769), in Paris, Archives Nationales (hereafter AN), Oi 842 no 7, f 27v A similar requirement was made for the accession of Gauzargues in 1757 – indeed he had to wait a year, during which he wrote the required number, before assuming the positionGoogle Scholar

2 Almanack musical (1775), 101–4, repr Geneva, 1971–2, 109–12 All the figures cued below are taken from this sourceGoogle Scholar

3 Gerbert, Martin, De cantu et musica sacra, 2 vols (St Blasien, 1774), ii, 363Google Scholar

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6 For details of the chapel positions at court, see Jean Mongrédien, La musique en France des lumières au romantisme (Paris, 1986), 160–4 For more details on Notre Dame, see Anne-Marie Yvon, ‘La maîtrise de Notre-Dame aux XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles’, 8e centennaire de Notre-Dame de Parts, Congrès 1964 (Paris, 1967), 359–99Google Scholar

7 In French choral music the basse-taille, literally ‘low tenor’, was a baritone, the taille was a tenor, and the haute-contre was an unusual high tenor range, almost equivalent to the alto It was sung neither by castrati nor in falsetto Towards the end of the century, the basse-taille often shared the music of either the bass or the taille, and eventually it was eliminated as a separate voice part in the choirGoogle Scholar

8 François Léon Chartier, L'ancien chapitre de Notre-Dame de Parts et sa maîtrise (Paris, 1897), 126 The actual value of this amount is difficult to translate into modern terms A livre was worth a little less than an English shilling of the period, according to Arthur Young (cited in John Lough, An Introduction to Eighteenth Century France, London, 1960, vi) It is perhaps more useful to assess the value in relation to the figures given below for SS InnocentsGoogle Scholar

9 Bernier entered the service at Versailles in 1723, and kept the two positions until 1726Google Scholar

10 See Brenet, Michel, Musiciens de la Sainte-Chapelle du Palais (Paris, 1910), for the few details on these composers, and for some reviews of motet performances (esp pp 305ff)Google Scholar

11 La musique à la cour de Louis XIV et de Louis XV d'après les mémoires de Sourches et Luynes, ed Norbert Dufourcq (Paris, 1970), 159 The Duc de Luynes writes that in 1753 the budget for music was 10,000 livres and that there were 17 or 18 musiciansGoogle Scholar

12 Brenet, Musiciens de la Sainte-Chapelle, 314Google Scholar

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17 Abbé Lebeuf, Histoire de la ville et de tout le diocèse de Parts, 7 vols (Paris, c 1750, new edn Paris, 1883, repr Brussels, 1969), i, 47.Google Scholar

18 See ibid for the size of the parish A painting of the church and cemetery dating from about 1550 survives at the Musée CarnavaletGoogle Scholar

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25 Pierre, Histoire du Concert Spirituel, 235 Gaumé was preceded in concert performances by maîtres Lallouette of Notre Dame in 1726 and La Croix of the Sainte-Chapelle earlier in 1728 (All the statistics cited for Concert Spirituel appearances below represent a minimum figure, since Pierre's catalogue, while authoritative, lacks details for many of the concerts)Google Scholar

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29 A Cantate domino, no 251 in the Catalogue thématique des sources du grand motet français (1663–1792), ed Jean Mongrédien (Munich, 1984), which is attributed to ‘Monsieur Bordery’ A work with this title by Bordier was given at the Concert Spirituel on 15 May 1738Google Scholar

30 A basse-contre is a bass It is frequently designated as such to distinguish it from the basse-taille The rarer term haute-taille means the same as taille, and serves to make the same distinction The scribe here illustrates the changing taste in French continuo playing The basse de violon is a low member of the violin family, popular in France early in the eighteenth century, that was at this time giving way to the celloGoogle Scholar

31 AN, LL 760, f 221 Louis XV's recovery from a near-fatal illness, suffered while leading his army in the north of France this year, was a cause for great jubilation and innumerable Te deums throughout the realm The nickname of Louis 'le Bien-Aimé“, which seems bizarre in the context of his later reign, dates from this timeGoogle Scholar

32 For the rises see AN, LL 760, f 198 (for 1740) and f 254 (for 1751) For the financial accounts for 1760, see AN, H 4736. For references below, note that each year of accounts is catalogued with a subsequent number, e g H 4737 for 1761, H 4741 for 1765, H 4752 for 1776, etcGoogle Scholar

33 AN, H 4443 accounts of St Jacques de la Boucherie for 1786Google Scholar

34 See AN, H 4433, ff 7985Google Scholar

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36 See Paris, Bibliothèque Nationale (hereafter BN), H 594 and H 596Google Scholar

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38 Fait le 26 Xbre / 1765 pour les St Innocents’ See BN, MS 9894Google Scholar

39 AN, LL 761, f 40v, for 10 September 1764 This volume covers the years 1756–84Google Scholar

40 Jean Benjamin de LaBorde, Essai sur la musique, 4 vols (Paris, 1780), iii, 437 LaBorde was also a pupil of RameauGoogle Scholar

41 AN, LL 761, f 70v The ‘chant sur le livre’ referred to is a kind of improvised harmonization of the chant by the choir, cultivated in the French church for many centuriesGoogle Scholar

42 Journal de musique historique, théoretique, et pratique (March 1771), 207Google Scholar

43 See Catalogue thématique, ed Mongrédien, 204 This is confirmed by Laborde in his Essais (iii, 474), who says its success that year led to Roze's promotion to the cathedral at AngersGoogle Scholar

44 According to Mongrédien, La musique en France, 171 He cites Roze himself, who admits that his instruction ended at the age of 10Google Scholar

45 Fage, La, ‘Abbé Roze’, Le plein-chant, 6 (June 1861), quoted in Jean Mongrédien, Jean-François Le Sueur Contribution à l'étude d'un demi-siècle de musique française, 2 vols (Berne, 1980), i, 1819Google Scholar

46 Joseph François Michaud, Biographie universelle ancienne et moderne (Paris, 1856), s v ‘Roze’ Roze actually left the post in 1780Google Scholar

47 AN, LL 762, f 2v for 4 March, f S for 30 March This volume covers the period from 1784 until 1786Google Scholar

48 Mongrédien, Jean-François Le Sueur, 1, 65Google Scholar

49 Cited in Félix Lazare, Dictionnaire administratif et historique des rues et monuments de Paris (2nd edn, Paris, 1855), 433 As the cemetery was cleared, the bones were removed to caves under the present Place Denfert-Rochereau, where they became the first residents of the extensive catacombs one may visit today One account suggests that two million bodies had been laid in the cemetery See Pillement, Georges, Paris disparu (Paris, 1966), 332Google Scholar

50 Dulaure, Histoire, viii, 352Google Scholar

51 BN, H 4762, ‘Préamble’ The accounts for this year are preceded by a history of the events of the year, including copies of various documents and agreementsGoogle Scholar

52 The necessary alterations and additions were made by Sajou and several others See Lazare, Dictionnaire, 433Google Scholar

53 AN. H 4762, Prémble' The details below are also from this source.Google Scholar

54 See the introduction to the accounts for St Jacques et les SS Innocents for 1786, AN, H 4443, f. 11.Google Scholar

55 See Registre de Commitée de la paraisse St Jacques et les Innocents', AN. LL 783. f. 6v (for 5 January 1787). He was awarded 300 livres for des payments et des honoraires relativement aux depenses de Musique occasionner pour la celebration de la fete des SS Innocents'.Google Scholar

56 Calendrier musical (1789). 66.Google Scholar