ESTAMPIES & DANSES ROYALES
Le manuscrit du roi ca.1270-1320 ( CD version )
Hespèrion XXI, Jordi Savall
17,99€
Reference: AV9857 CD version
- Hespèrion XXI
- Jordi Savall
- This is a CD version of AVSA9857
“The estampie is a musical composition without words which has a complex melodic progression (habens difficiles concordantiarum discretionem) and which is divided into points (puncti). Because of its difficulty, it totally absorbs both the performer and the listener, and often distracts the minds of the rich from wicked thoughts” – an echo of the profound and abiding conviction of those early minstrels and poet-musicians, who even then were aware of the powerful influence that music can have in the education of human beings.
As we stand at the dawn of the 21st century, more than seven hundred years separate us from the age when this fascinating music was created and performed for the first time. Still breathtakingly mysterious and vibrantly beautiful, it is one of the earliest surviving collections of medieval instrumental music, preserved thanks to a written source dating from the period. These pieces still surprise and move us today, thanks to their rhythmic beat and poetic charm which, in spite of the seven centuries of amnesia separating them from us, remain astonishingly clear and captivating. The age of crusading King Louis IX was at an end and Philip IV, called “the Fair”, was now King of France (1285-1314); indeed, the very manner of writing and the notation of the manuscript confirm that it was probably at the end of the 13th century, or at the very latest around 1310, when an anonymous musician decided to copy down in this fine “Manuscrit du Roi” (mss. français 844, Bibliothèque Nationale, also known as “Chansonnier du Roi “), the ESTAMPIES ET DANSES ROYALES, which we have restored and re-interpreted in full in this new recording, using period instruments.
Surprisingly for such a rare and important source, it was not until 1907 that these ESTAMPIES ET DANSES ROYALES were rediscovered for the modern era, thanks to the French musicologist Pierre Aubry’s publication of his interesting study subtitled “Les plus anciens textes de musique instrumentale au Moyen Age” (“The earliest surviving texts of medieval instrumental music”), including a facsimile and a complete transcription of the works. Since that time there have been numerous interpretations and performances of these pieces in both concerts and recordings by groups more or less specialising in the medieval repertory, although they have for the most part featured isolated pieces combined with vocal music from the same period.
+ Informació al llibret del CD
JORDI SAVALL
Paris, January 2008
Translated by Jacqueline Minett
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