FREE UK SHIPPING OVER £35!

Balbastre - Pieces de Clavecin (1759) | Brilliant Classics 97560

Balbastre - Pieces de Clavecin (1759)

£10.99

In stock - available for despatch within 1 working day

New Item

Label: Brilliant Classics

Cat No: 97560

Barcode: 5028421975603

Format: CD

Number of Discs: 2

Genre: Instrumental

Release Date: 18th July 2025

Contents

Artists

Marek Toporowski (harpsichord)

Works

Balbastre, Claude

La d'Esclignac
Le Coucou
Pieces de Clavecin, Book 1
Prelude

Artists

Marek Toporowski (harpsichord)

About

Claude-Benigne Balbastre (1727-1799) published his first book of harpsichord pieces in 1759, nine years after a decisive move from his home city of Dijon to the metropolis of Paris. France had been inundated with Italian music and musicians for more than 50 years, and Balbastre’s style is inflected by the latest Italian trends, while remaining unmistakably and deliciously French.

The titles of the individual works refer to the surnames of distinguished and influential figures in the Parisian world of the mid- to late-18th century. They are not necessarily portraits; the point here is rather the dedication, although this music indubitably represents a wonderful picture of the world surrounding Balbastre. One of the composer's biographers has remarked that ‘More than portraits without words supposed to musically evoke a personality, the harpsichord pieces constitute a tribute or a sign of gratitude with regard to said personality. The portrait thus painted is only allusive and mysterious.’

For example, one of Balbastre’s most famous and spectacular works, the Italian-style gigue La Lugeac (F major), is probably a portrait of Louis XV’s close companion, the Marquis Charles-Antoine de Guérin (1720–82), who had been born at the Chateau de Lugeac and was described by his contemporaries as ‘Le beau Lugeac’.

In his own booklet introduction to Balbastre’s life and work, Marek Toporowski extols the First Book as ‘a true masterpiece’, combining French elegance of Classical style; imagery alluding to the operas of Rameau; virtuosity reminiscent of Scarlatti, Mozart and Rameau; mastery of form and textural richness. Compared to other surviving music by Balbastre, Toporowski finds these pieces ‘less simple in the sense of Classical economy of texture, more sophisticated and Baroque.’

The Polish harpsichordist, organist, chamber musician, and conductor Marek Toporowski was a pupil of both Bob van Asperen and Daniel Roth, He has made this new recording on a copy of a French harpsichord, completed in 1984 for harpsichordist, pianist and painter Julitta Slendzińska by Zygmunt Kaczmarski. ‘It is a fascinating, exceptional instrument,’ he says, ‘in terms of timbral class, with a full, juicy sound and enchanting dynamic capabilities.’

Also Available

Pinto - Sonatas for Piano and Violin
Pinto - Sonatas for Piano and Violin

£9.15

(Brilliant Classics)

Jadin - Piano Sonatas, opp.4-6
Jadin - Piano Sonatas, opp.4-6

£10.99

(Brilliant Classics)

Jadin - Sonatas for Piano with Violin
Jadin - Sonatas for Piano with Violin

£10.99

(Brilliant Classics)

Ries - 3 Violin Sonatas
Ries - 3 Violin Sonatas

£9.15

(Brilliant Classics)

Balbastre - 4 Suites de Noels
Balbastre - 4 Suites de Noels

£14.03

(Radio France)

Error on this page? Let us know here

Need more information on this product? Click here