Dauvergne: Hercule mourant Christophe Rousset

Album Info

Album Veröffentlichung:
2012

HRA-Veröffentlichung:
12.10.2017

Label: Aparté

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Vocal

Interpret: Christophe Rousset

Komponist: Antoine Dauvergne

Das Album enthält Albumcover

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Formate & Preise

Format Preis Im Warenkorb Kaufen
FLAC 48 $ 13,20
  • Antoine Dauvergne (1713-1797): Hercule mourant:
  • 1 Ouverture 02:32
  • 2 Prestissimo 01:33
  • Act I:
  • 3 Act I Scene 1 Dircé, voici le jour où mon sort se décide 01:14
  • 4 Act I Scene 1: Il vit pour l'univers ; il ne vit plus pour nous 01:35
  • 5 Act I Scene 2: Mais que vois-je ? Mon fils ! 01:14
  • 6 Act I Scene 2: Tout en elle intéresse, enchante 01:24
  • 7 Act I Scene 3: Victoire, victoire ! 02:13
  • 8 Act I Scene 3: Air pour les peuples 01:20
  • 9 Act I Scene 3: Air pour les peuples 02:27
  • 10 Act I Scene 3: Triomphe aimable paix, enchaîne les héros 02:33
  • 11 Act I Scene 3: Sarabande 01:05
  • 12 Act I Scene 3: Première et deuxième gavottes 01:26
  • 13 Act I Scene 3: Contredanse 00:22
  • 14 Act I Scene 3: Peuple, c'est votre appui qui revient dans ces lieux 00:14
  • 15 Act I Scene 4: N'es-tu qu'à moi seule fatale 01:22
  • 16 Act I Scene 4: Non, non, dans la nature entière 00:56
  • 17 Act I Scene 4: Va, répands dans son sein les feux qui me consument 02:03
  • Act II:
  • 18 Act II Scene 1: Quelle voix suspend mes alarmes ? 03:32
  • 19 Act II Scene 2: Venez, fille des rois, il est temps de paraître 03:00
  • 20 Act II Scene 2: Fille de Palénor, j'ai vu la flamme errante 01:37
  • 21 Act II Scene 2: Le plaisir de mêler nos larmes n'adoucira plus nos malheurs 01:23
  • 22 Act II Scene 3: Mon fils, que tes vaisseaux, avant la fin du jour 00:40
  • 23 Act II Scene 4: De mon bonheur puis-je douter encore, Dircé ? 01:11
  • 24 Act II Scene 5: Épouse d'un héros qui a des dieux sur l'image 01:01
  • 25 Act II Scene 5: Air pour tous les captifs 01:17
  • 26 Act II Scene 5: Air pour les Européens 02:07
  • 27 Act II Scene 5: Premier et deuxième airs des Africains 02:04
  • 28 Act II Scene 5: Je trouve mes dieux partout où l'on aime 02:50
  • 29 Act II Scene 5: Premier air pour les Asiatiques 02:29
  • 30 Act II Scene 5: Premier et deuxième rigaudons 01:20
  • 31 Act II Scene 5: Princesse, au gré de la victoire 02:02
  • 32 Act II Scene 6: Est-ce à vous de la retenir ? 01:11
  • 33 Act II Scene 6: La honte, la douleur, le désespoir, la rage 03:08
  • 34 Act II Scene 6: Air pour les Européens 02:59
  • Act III:
  • 35 Act III Scene 1: Trompeuse image de ma gloire 02:18
  • 36 Act III Scene 2: Au pied du mont Olympe 02:27
  • 37 Act III Scene 2: Annonce des jeux Olympiques (Solo – Marche) 01:34
  • 38 Act III Scene 3: Arbitre des destins 03:05
  • 39 Act III Scene 3: Prélude 00:34
  • 40 Act III Scene 3: Chantons Alcide et ses combats 02:04
  • 41 Act III Scene 3: Air des lutteurs 01:32
  • 42 Act III Scene 3: Fanfare 00:52
  • 43 Act III Scene 3: Amour, vole sur le char de la gloire 03:52
  • 44 Act III Scene 3: Loure pour le prix de la danse 01:43
  • 45 Act III Scene 3: Air en fanfare 00:33
  • 46 Act III Scene 3: Peuples, que l'univers célèbre, à votre exemple 00:37
  • 47 Act III Scene 3: Fanfare 00:36
  • 48 Act III Scene 4: Quoi ! Mon fils de retour ? 04:06
  • Act IV:
  • 49 Act IV Scene 1: Qu'ai-je fait ! Ô Nessus, ta fureur m'a trompée 01:44
  • 50 Act IV Scene 2: Dieu, grand Dieu, sois sensible 03:10
  • 51 Act IV Scene 2: Premier air des prêtres de Jupiter 01:10
  • 52 Act IV Scene 2: Sarabande 01:36
  • 53 Act IV Scene 2: Première et deuxième gavottes 02:28
  • 54 Act IV Scene 2: Père d'Alcide à tes genoux pour lui, nos vœux se font entendre 00:51
  • 55 Act IV Scene 2: Premier et deuxième airs 02:40
  • 56 Act IV Scene 2: Le temple est ébranlé ! Quels éclats menaçants ! 00:34
  • 57 Act IV Scene 3: Ah, mon fils ! 01:36
  • 58 Act IV Scene 3: Couvert de la robe fatale 02:47
  • 59 Act IV Scene 3: De mes transports jaloux ton père est la victime 01:23
  • 60 Act IV Scene 3: Air 01:07
  • Act V:
  • 61 Act V Scene 1: Alcide au tombeau va descendre 03:47
  • 62 Act V Scene 2: Enfin je succombe à ma rage 01:12
  • 63 Act V Scene 3: Approche 01:13
  • 64 Act V Scene 4: Ô jour fatal ! Ô mort cruelle ! 01:49
  • 65 Act V Scene 4: Que dis-je ? Arrête, éloigne toi 01:39
  • 66 Act V Scene 4: Au défaut de mes mains tremblantes 01:39
  • 67 Act V Scene 4: Il expire dans les tourments 00:56
  • 68 Act V Scene 4: Hilus, jure moi d'accomplir la volonté d'un père 01:04
  • 69 Act V Scene 4: Tonnerre et embrasement du bûcher 00:39
  • 70 Act V Scene 4: Descente de Jupiter et de la cour Céleste 00:53
  • 71 Act V Scene 5: Viens mon fils 00:51
  • 72 Act V Scene 5: Que tout l'univers soit ton temple 01:54
  • 73 Act V Scene 5: Air pour les divinités célestes 01:49
  • 74 Act V Scene 5: Premier et deuxième airs 03:19
  • 75 Act V Scene 5: Peuples, recevez mes adieux 00:47
  • 76 Act V Scene 5: Chaconne 08:44
  • Total Runtime 02:18:38

Info zu Dauvergne: Hercule mourant

Following on the international success of their recording of Lully's Bellerophon, Christophe Rousset and his ensemble Les Talens Lyriques present Hercule mourant (Hercules Dying) - an undiscovered operatic treasure by Antoine Dauvergne. When Francoeur and Rebel took over as directors of the Academie Royale de Musique (the Paris Opéra) in 1757, they decided to promote some of the new generation of composers. Among them was Dauvergne, who appears to have enjoyed great favor at that time. Premiered in 1762, Hercule mourant was a success, receiving eighteen performances. The opera's libretto by Jean-Francois Marmontel extended the scope of French opera: he was the first to have the courage to bring opera closer to the great spectacles of ancient Greece. Inspired and guided by Marmontel's libretto, he clearly aimed to take the genre in a completely new direction, anticipating the Romantic model for opera that was born with Gluck, while at the same time giving one of the last tributes to the great French tragedie lyrique tradition inherited from Lully.

“Rousset’s theatrical pacing is spot-on; Les Talens Lyriques are on fine form in the lithe Ouverture; and dances are played with a keen sense of balletic movement. Véronique Gens’s authoritative recitatives convey the swinging emotional fortunes of the anxious Déjanire … Hercules’s bitter shame at his unworthy deceit of his wife at the start of Act 3 is sung commandingly by Andrew Foster-Williams.” (Gramophone)

“The remorseful Dejanire is the real tragic figure here, and Veronique Gen’s commanding assumption conveys the anguish of a woman sick at heart. Singing multiple roles, Jael Azzaretti is heard to fine effect … Rousset and his choral and instrumental forces are on top form.” (Opera)

„This is an enjoyable disc, and Christophe Rousset’s accompaniment is mostly flawless. Andrew Foster-Williams (Hercules) has the measure of the drama in his role, even if his tone is occasionally a little rough. Very well recorded, this is a work to savour even if it doesn’t pack the punch of Dauvergne’s teachers, Rameau.“ (BBC Music Magazine)

Les Chantres du Centre de musique baroque de Versailles
Les Talens Lyriques
Christophe Rousset, conductor




Christophe Rousset
the founder of the Les Talens Lyriques and an internationally renowned harpsichordist, is a musician and an orchestral conductor inspired by a passion for opera and the rediscovery of the European musical heritage.

After harpsichord studies at La Schola Cantorum in Paris with Huguette Dreyfus, followed by the Conservatoire Royal in The Hague with Bob van Asperen (winning, at the age of 22, the prestigious First Prize in the 7th Bruges Harpsichord Competition), and followed in turn by the creation of his own ensemble, Les Talens Lyriques, in 1991, Christophe Rousset has a perfect grasp of the richness and diversity of the Baroque, Classical and Preromantic repertoires.

After initially attracting attention for his extraordinary talent as a harpsichordist, he soon made his mark as a conductor, with invitations from around the world to perform with his ensemble (Opéra de Paris, De Nederlandse Opera, Théâtre des Champs-Élysées, Salle Pleyel, Opéra de Lausanne, Teatro Real, Theater an der Wien, Opéra Royal de Versailles, Théâtre Royal de la Monnaie, Barbican Centre, Carnegie Hall, Concertgebouw Amsterdam, the Aix-en-Provence and Beaune Festivals, to name but a few venues).

Alongside this, he has continued to pursue an active career as harpsichordist and chamber musician, performing and recording on the most beautiful period instruments. His complete performances of the works for harpsichord of F. Couperin, Rameau, d’Anglebert and Forqueray and various recordings of pieces by J. S. Bach (Partitas, Variations Goldberg, Concertos for harpsichord, English Suites, French Suites, Klavierbüchlein) are considered landmarks. His most recent recording of another musical monument by the German Cantor, the 2nd book of the Well-tempered Clavier (Aparté) – a recording made in the Château of Versailles on a Joannes Ruckers harpsichord (1628) – has been awarded a number of honours, including a “Choc” from Classica magazine and CD of the week from Britain’s Radio 3. The instruments of the Paris Museum of Music have also been entrusted to him for the recording of three CDs of music by Royer, Rameau and Froberger.

Teaching is also an aspect with major importance for Christophe Rousset, who conducts and organises master classes and academies for young people (Accademia Musicale Chigiana in Siena, CNSMDs Paris, Académie d’Ambronay, Orchestre Français des Jeunes Baroques, Jeune Orchestre Atlantique, Junge Deutsche Philharmonie, the Britten-Pears Orchestra) and he devotes himself with great energy, alongside the musicians of Les Talens Lyriques, to introducing young secondary school pupils in Paris and the surrounding region to the world of music.

Christophe also has a career as guest conductor (Liceu Barcelona, San Carlo Naples, La Scala Milan, Opéra Royal de Wallonie, Orquesta Nacional de España and the Hong Kong Philharmonic, Orchestre du Théâtre Royal de la Monnaie, among other orchestras) as well as the active pursuit of musical research, with the production of critical editions and the publication by Actes Sud of a study on Rameau in 2007.

Christophe Rousset has been awarded the French honours of Chevalier of the Légion d’honneur, Commandeur in the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres and Chevalier in the Ordre national du Mérite.



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