Alexandre Le Riche de La Poupelinière
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Alexandre Jean Joseph Le Riche de La Poupelinière (1693 — 1762) was an immensely wealthy fermier général[1] who was one of the greatest patrons of music and musicians of the eighteenth century.[2] A true patron of the Enlightenment he gathered round him a circle of artists, men of letters and musicians. He kept a private orchestra, "the best that was known in those days", according to Jean-François Marmontel.[3] which was led for twenty-two years by Jean-Philippe Rameau, who was succeeded by Johann Stamitz and then by François Joseph Gossec. The best Italian musicians, violinists, singers, were lodged with him and fed at his table, and all, according to Marmontel, were inspired to shine competitively in his salon. Voltaire was obliged to his generosity, and Maurice Quentin de La Tour and Carle van Loo both painted his portrait. Marmontel recalled later "Never did a bourgeois live in more princely style, and the princes came to enjoy his pleasures"[4]
Separated from his wife, La Poupelinière established himself luxuriously at Passy, a fashionable suburb west of Paris. The best singers from the Opéra and the most beautiful dancers embellished his suppers. In his private theatre he mounted his own comedies;[5] Marmontel found them mediocre, but expressed witrh such taste and so well written that it was not excessive flattery to applaud them.
Rameau met most of his librettists at the hôtel de La Poupelinière at Passy and his operas were composed in the house.
[edit] Notes
- ^ The only son of his father, Alexandre Le Riche (1663-1735), seigneur of Courgains, (Anjou) and Brétignolles (Touraine), likewise a fermier générale.
- ^ J.-G. Prod'homme and Theodore Baker, "A French Mæcenas of the Time of Louis XV: M. de La Pouplinière" The Musical Quarterly 10.4 (October 1924:511-531).
- ^ " le meilleur concert de musique qui fût connu dans ce temps-là." Marmontel, Mémoires
- ^ "Jamais bourgeois n'a mieux vécu en prince, et les princes venaient jouir de ses plaisirs." Marmontel, Mémoires
- ^ He had published a Journal de voyage en Hollande (1731) and Tableaux et mœurs du temps.