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G 13.003 CoverMichel de la Barre (approx. 1675–1743/44)
Deuxième Suitte de Pièces

for 2 (transverse) flutes without bass
Edited by Franz Müller-Busch

Girolamo G 13.003, playing score, € 12,00
ISMN 979-0-50084-016-2

sample page

G 13.002 G 18.001

 

 

 

 


Preface

Date of birth and birthplace of Michel de la Barre are unknown. Since his first printed work – trio sonatas for two violins, flutes or oboes and b.c. – was published in 1694, he was probably born around 1675. In 1700 he became flautist at the Académie Royale de Musique and in 1704 a member in the Musettes et Hautbois de Pitou. After having also been appointed to the post of the Flûte de la Chambre du Roy, he was holding probably the highest positions attainable during that period in France.

The Deuxième Suitte presented here was printed in 1710 in Paris. The succession of dance movements seems still a little arbitrary, yet with a closer look one can recognize the almost consistent change between quick and slow tempi. Of interest is especially the untypical second quick Allemande and the Contrefaiseurs (imitators), set in a through-composed round structure.

According to the common practice, the suite has been transposed a small third upwards for treble recorders. The few obvious printing errors in the draft have been corrected discreetly and the notation has been modernised. Any other changes and additions made by the author have been indicated.

In order to interpret the suite in a French manner one should take the rules of French music carefully into consideration as described inter alia in J. Hotteterre-le-Romain’s treatise Principes de la flûte (1707). It is important to mention here the so called inegalité, referring to the practice that the lengths of faster pairs of notes are played unevenly. The first note is slightly broadened so that the following note has to be shortened accordingly. This technique should be applied in variable fashion, suiting the mood of a movement or part of it. The inégal technique should be supported by an articulation with which the longer note begins with a soft de or re and the shorter note with a harder te. Longer sustained notes one could often embellish with a flattement, that is a finger vibrato, a very effectful ornamentation, produced on a nearby or more remote fingering hole. De la Barre uses for a trill sign simply an x (in this edition changed into a +), indicating a trill or inverted mordent. Other embellishments are mostly written fully out in small notes. Ultimately the player will decide according to his taste and knowledge where and how to embellish, in order to enhance the special character of the piece and to attain the right effect.

Translation: J. Whybrow

Calw, April 1996, Franz Müller-Busch

 

Content

  1. Fantaisie
  2. Allemande
  3. Allemande
  4. Contrefaiseurs
  5. Rondeau
  6. Gavotte en Rondeau
  7. Gigue
  8. Bourée en Rondeau

 

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