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            Fleur De Lys - The Solo Suite 
              before Bach  
              Nicolas HOTMAN (1610-1663) 
               
              Suite in d minor [17:39]  
              Le Sieur DUBUISSON (?-1688) 
               
              Suite in d minor [11:04]  
              Le Sieur DE MACHY (?-1692) 
               
              Suite No. 4 in G [14:32]  
              Jean DE SAINTE COLOMBE (c.1615-c.1701) 
               
              Suite in d minor [21:27]  
              Marin MARAIS (1656-1728) 
               
              Tombeau pour Mr. de Ste. Colombe* [06:18]  
                
              Charles Medlam (viola da gamba), William Carter (theorbo) (*)  
              rec. 22-23 March 2010, The Studio, Brick Kiln Cottage, Hollington, 
              Hampshire, UK. DDD  
                
              CELLO CLASSICS CC1028 [71:04]   
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                  It’s ironic, isn't it, that this disc of French music 
                  for viola da gamba appears on the Cello Classics label. The 
                  Italian in the first half of the 18th century was in the process 
                  of superseding the viola da gamba, the symbol of everything 
                  that was French in music. This was the direct reason a certain 
                  Hubert Le Blanc published a book in Amsterdam in 1740, called 
                  Défense de la basse de viole contre les entreprises 
                  du violon et les prétentions du violoncelle (A Defence 
                  of the bass viol against the ventures of the violin and the 
                  pretensions of the violoncello). Le Blanc, a lawyer by profession, 
                  was a staunch admirer of the traditional French style. The title 
                  of the third part of his book is telling: "A method to make 
                  all music playable on the Viol". It was a final stand designed 
                  to save the bass viol from extinction.  
                     
                  For Le Blanc the heyday of the viola da gamba was the time of 
                  Marin Marais and Antoine Forqueray. Their works are also attracting 
                  much attention today, and they are well represented on disc. 
                  This may give the impression that music for viola da gamba always 
                  came with a part for basso continuo. But that is not the case. 
                  The music of previous generations, in particular that of the 
                  mid-17th century, receives far less attention. At that time 
                  most pieces were written for solo viol, without accompaniment. 
                  Even the first book of Marais, which appeared in 1686, was first 
                  printed with only a part for the bass viol. An additional part 
                  for the basso continuo was printed three years later. It is 
                  an indication that in this book the basso continuo is optional. 
                   
                     
                  The first three composers in the programme are largely unknown 
                  quantities. Not that much is known about them. Nicolas Hotman 
                  was not of French birth. According to Charles Medlam he was 
                  from Flanders, others believe his roots were in Germany. He 
                  moved to France at a young age: in 1626 he became a French citizen, 
                  in 1655 he was employed by the King's brother, and in 1661 he 
                  entered the service of Louis XIV himself, as the successor of 
                  Louis Couperin. In a treatise on the viol from 1687 Hotman is 
                  called "the first in France to compose real Pièces d'Harmonie 
                  on the viol, to compose beautiful melodies and to imitate the 
                  voice." At his time the design of the suite had not been formalised. 
                  His Suite in d minor begins with two allemandes, which 
                  are followed by a courante with a double, a sarabande, a bourée 
                  and two ballets, embracing a gigue.  
                     
                  Soon virtually every suite contained a sequence of allemande, 
                  courante, sarabande and gigue, often preceded by a prélude. 
                  In many suites other pieces were added, like a gavotte or a 
                  ballet, and often they ended with a chaconne or a passacaille. 
                  One composer who extended the suite this way was Jean de Sainte 
                  Colombe, who was a pupil of Hotman. He remains a somewhat mystical 
                  character. For a long time even his Christian name wasn't known, 
                  and he was usually referred to as Sieur de Sainte Colombe. The 
                  American gambist Jonathan Dunford discovered that his Christian 
                  name was Jean. He also found strong evidence that he was a Huguenot, 
                  which would explain why he never had any official position at 
                  the court and that at the end of the 17th century disappeared 
                  from public life. This could have been the effect of Louis XIV 
                  revoking the Edict of Nantes and declaring Protestantism illegal. 
                  It could also explain why, according to a newspaper, his son 
                  lived in London in 1718. In the Suite in d minor the 
                  courante and the sarabande have a double - an ornamented version 
                  of the preceding dance - a gavotte and a ballet, and proceedings 
                  end with a chaconne. Sainte-Colombe was the teacher of Marin 
                  Marais, who composed the moving tribute to his teacher which 
                  ends this disc.  
                     
                  Dubuisson was from Picardy and only seems to have adopted the 
                  name of 'Du Buisson' later in his life, adding that he was a 
                  'bourgeois de Paris'. More than a hundred pieces for unaccompanied 
                  viol by Dubuisson have survived, and the dissemination of his 
                  compositions outside France shows that his music was highly 
                  appreciated. His Suite in d minor has the four traditional 
                  dances, preceded by a prélude and followed by a ballet 
                  with a double. The allemande also has a double.  
                     
                  It is very likely Le Sieur de Machy was a pupil of Dubuisson. 
                  He had a position at the court and was the first to publish 
                  pieces for viol in 1685. He added a foreword in which he gave 
                  many hints in regard to the way the viol should be played. The 
                  Suite No. 4 in G is from this collection. To the four 
                  dances he added a prélude and a gavotte en rondeau. The 
                  suite ends with a chaconne.  
                     
                  This chaconne is the only piece (except Marais' Tombeau) 
                  of which I could find another performance in my collection. 
                  It was recorded by the Belgian gambist Philippe Pierlot, and 
                  was recently reissued as part of a set of discs devoted to the 
                  shift from the viol to the violin and the cello in France (Ricercar 
                  RIC 296). The difference between his performance and Charles 
                  Medlam's is huge. One would think they are playing different 
                  pieces. Charles Medlam's playing is straightforward, and rather 
                  stiff and wooden, whereas Pierlot's interpretation is full of 
                  zest and passion. In a recent interview Pierlot said that he 
                  was hugely impressed by the subtlety of French baroque music 
                  and he believes the performers went even further than the very 
                  detailed indications in the music indicate. He specifically 
                  warned against flat performances. And that is exactly what we 
                  get here, I'm afraid.  
                     
                  Hotman was admired for the "tenderness of his playing" with 
                  which he "charmed all those who heard him". I found his Suite 
                  in d minor rather uninteresting, and that is probably more 
                  due to Charles Medlam's playing than to the quality of Hotman's 
                  music. The Suite in d minor by Dubuisson comes off best, 
                  and some movements from the Suite in G by De Machy and 
                  the Tombeau by Marais are relatively well done. But in 
                  general I am quite disappointed about these performances which 
                  lack the elegance and the aristocratic splendour which is so 
                  characteristic of this repertoire. That is particularly regrettable 
                  as there are so few recordings with French music for unaccompanied 
                  viol.  
                     
                  Johan van Veen  
                     
                 
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                 
                 
             
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