The concept behind this recording is to recreate the musical equivalent 
                of a tour of the gardens of Versailles with their magnificent 
                fountains. Insofar as any two art forms can be said to be analogous, 
                the music created for Louis XIV and his court does offer an aural 
                parallel to the visual splendours of the gardens. Whilst the real 
                thing would be ‘an ephemeral masterpiece’, as the subtitle of 
                this CD reminds us, the recording preserves the aural aspect for 
                repeated playing. 
                
A recreation of the smells of the court of the 
                  Sun King would be another matter – with totally inadequate facilities, 
                  the courtiers had to relieve themselves in the corridors of 
                  the palace. Nor am I sure that the concept of walking through 
                  the gardens with piped muzack, however discrete and however 
                  appropriate, is totally appealing. 
                
If some of the contents of this CD seem familiar, 
                  the small print on the back of the packaging will explain why 
                  – tracks 2-4, the three Rameau Overtures, are taken from a 1997 
                  Decca recording, which remains available at mid price (475 9107 
                  or 476 2596), and the excerpts from several of the operas are 
                  taken from various highly regarded Naïve and Ambroisie recordings 
                  advertised in the booklet, some of them very recent. Such re-jigging 
                  is not unusual, but it is annoying if, for example, like me, 
                  you are duplicating the Rameau overtures, amounting to 20% of 
                  the new CD. Those who already have the 2-CD Naïve set of Lully’s 
                  Persée, fine though these performances are, have duplicated 
                  12 of the 28 tracks. 
                
The very brief Gluck extract (one minute – was 
                  it worth it?) comes from a 2CD set, AM9995, which GPu recommended 
                  – see review. 
                  Composed a century after the Lully, Rameau and Desmarest items, 
                  neither this Gluck extract nor the final item, from Porpora’s 
                  Polifemo, has any connection with Versailles: both were composed for 
                  festivities at Parma. 
                
All the items on this CD are very short – the chaconne 
                  from Roland lasts nearly 12 minutes, otherwise there’s 
                  nothing much longer than 5 minutes – but that is the nature 
                  of this music. Teachers justifiably complain that TV has reduced 
                  the attention span of modern children, but the Sun King and 
                  his courtiers were probably similarly afflicted. In any event, 
                  this makes for variety and entertainment – there are plenty 
                  of these qualities to be had on this recording. 
                
Performances throughout are excellent – there is 
                  not one weak contribution. The soloists in the vocal excerpts 
                  are as accomplished as the orchestral players and the direction 
                  is superb. All concerned enter into the fun – including the 
                  prominent drum part in the Overture to Acante et Céphise 
                  (track 4). 
                
The recording is ideal; though taken from a range 
                  of sources and involving different producers and, presumably, 
                  different sound engineers and venues – the booklet does not 
                  specify – it is remarkably consistent in ambience and quality. 
                
The notes are informative and the (slightly abridged) 
                  English version is idiomatic. The presentation, in a laminated 
                  gatefold sleeve, the booklet housed in a pouch, is attractive. 
                  The English translation wisely does not attempt to render the 
                  French title – the Magnificent Musical Fountains of Versailles would be my inadequate 
                  best shot. A careless piece of editing in the booklet makes 
                  Rameau 101 at his death. 
                
You could do much worse in terms of an introduction 
                  to the very enjoyable music of Lully, Rameau and Desmarest, 
                  but the re-use of existing material detracts somewhat from its 
                  value. An equally serious reservation concerns the lack of texts 
                  for the vocal items – there aren’t that many, so they could 
                  easily have been fitted in. The ‘thumbs-up’ which I would otherwise 
                  have awarded is withheld for these reasons – and also because 
                  listening to this CD will probably tempt you to further duplication 
                  by investigating one of the complete recordings advertised in 
                  the booklet. 
                
Two super-budget-price recommendations of music 
                  by Lully will serve equally well as introductions to this music 
                  or as further listening for those who buy the Naïve recording 
                  and wish to explore further:
                  
                  Naxos 8.554003: Ballet Music for the Sun King 
                  (Aradia Ensemble/Kevin Mallon), 73 minutes of music from Molière’s 
                  Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme and several of the comédies-ballets, 
                  excellently performed on original instruments, plus less authentic 
                  kazoos and comb-and-paper! A real fun CD – and the words and 
                  translations of the vocal items are included in the booklet. 
                
Warner Apex 2564 62184-2: a 2-CD set of music from 
                  the comédies-ballets plus 74 minutes of excerpts from Phaëton 
                  (Les Musiciens du Louvre/Marc Minkowski). Another excellent 
                  bargain; there are about 11 minutes overlap with the Naxos CD 
                  on this well-filled set but, at the very low price, around £8 
                  in the UK, that’s a small matter. No texts for the vocal excerpts, 
                  though. 
                
              
For a more substantial chunk of the French baroque, 
                the super-budget 4-CD reissue of recordings of Charpentier, including 
                Les Plaisirs de Versailles and La Descente d’Orphée, 
                by Les Arts Florissants/William Christie takes some beating (Warner 
                Classics 2564 61758-2, £20 or less in the UK). For some other 
                recommendations, see my review 
                of Musique à Versailles performed by the Trio 
                Marie-Antoinette on Campanella Musica C130090.
                
                Brian 
                Wilson