Music, Dance and Franco-Italian Cultural Exchange, c.1700
Title Details

362 Pages

23.4 x 15.6 cm

18 b/w, 45 music examples illus.

Imprint: Boydell Press

Music, Dance and Franco-Italian Cultural Exchange, c.1700

Michel Pignolet de Montéclair and the prince de Vaudémont

by Don Fader

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Exposes the roots of 18th-century musical cosmopolitanism through an investigation of exchanges and collaborations between musicians and dancers from the two major national musical traditions in the early years of the century.

This study stems from discoveries in a trove of documents belonging to Charles-Henri de Lorraine, prince de Vaudémont, who served as governor of Milan under the Spanish crown from 1698 to 1706. These documents, together with a mass of other sources - letters, diaries, treatises, libretti, scores - offer a vivid new picture of musical life in Paris and Milan as well as exchanges between France and Italy. The book is both a patronage study and an examination of the contributions by - and the difficulties facing - musicians and dancers who worked across national and cultural boundaries.

Music, Dance, and Franco-Italian Cultural Exchange, c.1700 follows the careers of the prince and the French violinist and composer Michel Pignolet de Montéclair. In the context of a renewed fascination with Italian music in the 1690s, Montéclair made a name for himself in Paris as a pedagogue and composer who understood both national styles and blended them in a way that was successful on French terms. Vaudémont hired Montéclair to direct a French violin band and to compose dance music for a series of new operas that observers declared "the best in Italy" but are virtually unknown today. These productions involved collaborations among a mixed company of French and Italian musicians, dancers, composers, and librettists modeled on the practice of Turinese court operas. The book is an account of the contributions of these figures to the cultural life of Paris, Milan, and other northern Italian states, and to the creative mixing of musical styles, operatic conventions, and dance technique in France and Italy through the 1720s and beyond. The connections fostered by Vaudémont thus played a heretofore unrecognized early role in the development of 18th-century cosmopolitanism, and they attest to both the liveliness and the artistic importance of such exchanges in the era before the well-known travels of Handel, Telemann, and Vivaldi.
Introduction. Travel and Franco-Italian Musical Exchange at the Turn of the Eighteenth Century: New Perspectives, New Sources
1. From Brussels and Paris to Milan: An Introduction to the Prince de Vaudémont, Montéclair, and His Colleagues
2. Milan and Beyond: Musical Life and Cultural Exchange Under the Prince de Vaudémont
3. Turin and Milan: Music, Dance, and Italian-French Collaborations in the Northern Italian Operatic Nexus
4. Paris: Montéclair, the Réunion des goûts, and the Cosmopolitan Musician in the Public Sphere
Conclusion. Taste, Cosmopolitanism, and the Various Réunions des goûts of the Early Eighteenth Century
Epilogue: Later Records of Musicians and Musical Life under Vaudémont
Bibliography
Index

DON FADER is Associate Professor at the School of Music, University of Alabama.

"An extraordinary, many-sided contribution that deserves to become essential reading for students of French and Italian late baroque music." The Consort
"In addition to holding value for students and scholars of French and Italian traditions, this is a worthwhile read for scholars of early modern cosmopolitanism; and for university instructors, it provides substance for conversations on opera c. 1700 outside the epicenters of Paris, Venice, and Rome." QFIAB

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9781783276288

September 2021

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9781800102798

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Title Details

362 Pages

2.34 x 1.56 cm

18 b/w, 45 music examples illus.

Imprint: Boydell Press