
- EDITOR’S CHOICE
- A blockbuster star of Louis XIV's court, he invented French opera—and is still spellbinding.
Jean-Baptiste Lully
- Venerem, Simon Zauels, Marlo Thinnes, Laureen Stoulig, Michel Meis
- Léa Masson
- Relaxing Mode
- Guillaume Haldenwang, Marie Théoleyre, La Palatine
- Caroline Gruetzmacher
Live Albums
- caterva musica
- Emiliano Gonzalez Toro, Marie-Claude Henry, Cyril Auvity, Antonio Figueroa, Douglas Williams, Marc Mauillon, Etienne Bazola, Marie-Claude Chappuis, Chœur de Chambre de Namur, Christophe Rousset, Marie-Adeline Henry, Judith van Wanroij, Les Talens Lyriques
- Les Pages & les Chantres du Centre de musique baroque de Versailles, Les Symphonistes du Centre de Musique Baroque de Versailles, Musica Florea, Olivier Schneebeli
- RedHerring Baroque Ensemble
- US Army Chorus
- Chamber Orchestra Soloists of the Vienna Symphony, Herbert Weissberg
Singles & EPs
- Woodstock Sound Machine
- All-State Children’s Chorus, Lynell Joy Jenkins
- Various Artists
Biography
It is no small paradox that the man who most embodied the inflections and vocabulary of the 17th-century French musical Baroque was, in fact, an Italian. Born Giovanni Battista Lulli in Florence in 1632, Lully capitalised on his skills as a dancer and violinist following a move to Paris at the age of 14, proving himself an adroit careerist. Favoured by King Louis XIV, he rose seamlessly through the ranks until he arrived at the top, eventually becoming one of the King’s secretaires, a position customarily reserved for members of the nobility. The king was an accomplished dancer and Lully—together with his friend the dramatist Molière—pioneered the genre of Comédie-ballet, an exotic fusion of spoken word, dance and music. A man of the theatre to his fingertips, Lully also enthusiastically embraced opera, thereby paving the way for Rameau and Gluck. In works such as Alceste (1674), Atys (1675) and Psyché (1678), Lully invested mythological characters with an affecting human immediacy, adapting Italian models to distinctly French ends. The orchestra was reimagined, the distinction between aria and recitative blurred and the Gallic entente cordiale between gracefulness and statuesque monumentality reinforced. But the Royal Chapel wasn’t neglected, and a clutch of double-choir Grands Motets and a powerful funerary setting of the Miserere consummate Lully’s all-encompassing domination of French musical life.