RAMEAU, Jean-Philippe
b Dijon, 25 September 1683
d Paris, 12 September 1764, aged eighty
His father was a church organist. Jean-Philippe was meant to be a lawyer, but he showed such promise in music that he was allowed to leave the Jesuit College of Dijon and find his own musical education in Italy. In 1702 he was organist at Avignon Cathedral, then similarly at Clermont-Ferrand. In 1706 he was in Paris making a further study of the organ, and in 1709 he took over his father's post as organist at Dijon. In 1713 he went to Lyons to organise the musical celebrations of the Treaty of Utrecht, returning to Paris in 1722. After 1749 he wrote nothing of importance.
1706 (23)
p Harpsichord Works, Book I
1728 (45)
p Harpsichord Works, Book II
1733 (50)
Hippolyte et Aricie, opera
1735 (52)
Les Indes galantes, opera-ballet
1737 (54)
Castor et Pollux, opera-ballet
1739 (56)
Dardanus, opera
Les Fêtes d'Hebe, ballet
1741 (57)
p Harpsichord Works, Book III
1745 (62)
Platee, ballet
1748 (65)
Pigmalion, ballet
Zais, ballet
1754 (71)
Zephyre, ballet
1760 (78)
Les Paladins, opera-ballet
Rameau composed more than twenty operas and opera-ballets, church music, chamber music, cantatas, etc.