Une mauvaise fée aux mille visages s'est penchée sur le berceau de l'humanité : la connerie. Elle chemine avec nous, fidèle entre les fidèles, se réinventant au fil des siècles et des cultures. Elle fustige les différences, réduit en esclavage, attise la violence, cultive la cruauté, dévoie les avancées technologiques, trahit les espoirs politiques, gangrène les idéologies, et saccage la planète. Elle suivra notre espèce jusqu'à la tombe, et la creusera peut-être.
Le pire, c'est que nous en sommes plus souvent les complices que les victimes ! …
De l'Antiquité à la Révolution russe, les portraits de onze couples qui ont fait l'histoire côte à côte. …
Pelléas et Mélisande has taken it's place as one of opera's greatest masterpieces. Debussy deployed a unique style in this work, flexible and natural, never forcing the prosody of words and phrases. In this new historically informed interpretation, François-Xavier Roth and Les Siècles have endeavored to do justice to this music that is at once so strong and so delicate, supported by a handpicked cast of today's finest French singers.
Trente ans après la mort de Jésus, alors qu'elle est crépuscule de sa vie, Marie-Madeleine, ou Marie de Magdala, livre son témoignage sur la vie et les miracles du Christ. Un roman inspiré de la Bible se fondant sur des documents historiques. …
François Couperin was the greatest keyboard composer of the French Baroque, and his achievement, in both quality and quantity, is comparable only to Scarlatti's and Bach's. His fourth (and last) book of harpsichord music was published in 1730, a few years before the composer's death, and it represents a summing up of his career as a composer for his favorite instrument. These eight suites (or "ordres") contain fewer works than in the earlier books, but each one is a gem. Christophe Rousset's performances are simply the finest available, both in terms of interpretation and sound. These two discs are a fitting conclusion to a sensational series.
Just when you think you have all your Dall'Abacos in a row, they bring along a new one: Joseph-Marie-Clément Dall'Abaco was the son of famed cello virtuoso and composer Evaristo Felice Dall'Abaco. His long lifespan witnessed an unimaginable measure of musical developments; born the year Vivaldi published L'estro armonico, the younger Dall'Abaco died the year Beethoven commenced work on his Fifth Symphony. For all that time on earth, Dall'Abaco's extant catalog of works, all for cello, is comparatively slim; about 40 sonatas and this set of 11 caprices, preserved only in a very bad manuscript copy made in the nineteenth century. Although these works defy dating, stylistically, they seem to belong to the late Baroque, probably composed before Joseph-Marie-Clément Dall'Abaco was made a baron by the court at Munich in 1759. Although he appeared there many times, Dall'Abaco was never a member of the court orchestra in Munich, and the honorific may have been bestowed as a retroactive gesture to the memory of his father, whose exalted reputation Dall'Abaco was never able to outgrow while he lived.
Textes et poèmes (extraits). La vie de Jésus, dit par François Mauriac. Malagar & Asmodée dits par Fernand Ledoux. Poèmes et Mozart dits par Jean Servais. Cantique de Cybèle dit par Marie Bell. Génitrix dit par Jean Debucourt. Le bloc-notes dit par André Reybaz. L’Agneau dit par Jacqueline Morane.
Les Nations is a collection of chamber works published by François Couperin in 1726. Issued in four separate books, it was intended “for the use of music academies and concerts,” according to its title heading. It contains four extended works that feature movements in the French or the Italian manner, resulting in hybrid pieces that encompass both of the then sharply opposed styles.
Marin Marais published his Quatrième Livre de Pièces de Viole two years after the death of Louis XIV, establishing himself as the undisputed master of the genre and providing pieces not only for musicians who had achieved some skill on the viol but also for the most virtuoso players. Here Marais reshaped the classical forms, altering the traditional sequence for the suites and making an increasing use of character pieces. The sometimes whimsical imagery and the new freedom of form that these pieces contain reach their peak in the astonishing Suitte d'un goût étranger; these thirty or so pieces employ as yet unheard-of keys and offer a multitude of characters and representations that can tend towards the exotic. Breaking further new ground, and somewhat influenced by the Italian trio, Marais ended the Quatrième Livre with two suites for three viols, a genre he claimed to be new to France.