Philibert Delavigne
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Philibert Delavigne[1] (c. 1700 - 1750) [2] was a French composer. Little is known of his life, except that he was active at the court of Louis XV and entered the service of the Comte d'Agen around 1730.
Only three sets of compositions by Delavigne survive:
- op. 1 Six Suites (Paris, 1731)
- op. 2 [Trois] Sonates
- op. 4 Les Fleurs, 24 pièces
All these compositions are described in their full titles as suitable for musette de cour, hurdy-gurdy and violin or transverse flute. Robert A. Green[3] explains that the composer's preference was always shown by the exact order in which the instruments are named. According to this principle, Delavigne's surviving works were composed for musette even though they remain eminently accessible for the hurdy-gurdy.
[edit] Notes
- ^ also mentioned as De La Vigne, Lavigne
- ^ La Vigne, Philibert de (1700?-1760?) in the catalogue of the Bibliothèque Nationale de France
- ^ Robert A. Green the Hurdy-gurdy in Eighteenth-century France, 1995. Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-20942-0
[edit] References
- CD booklet by Pál Németh for Les Fleurs, Hungaroton HCD 32201
- front matter for modern edition of Les Fleurs, 1982, Amadeus Verlag BP 553
- biographical notes in Musiques en duo pour Vielles à Roue, ed. Fromenteau/Casteuble, 1980. Editions J.M. Fuzeau