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Jacquet de la Guerre: Chamber Music

2M streams

1,969,219

De La Guerre: Pieces De Clavecin

81.1K streams

81,059

Élisabeth Jacquet de La Guerre: Sonat...

59.2K streams

59,165

Elisabeth Jacquet de la Guerre: Cépha...

56.4K streams

56,418

Jacquet De La Guerre: Harpischord Suit...

49K streams

48,969

Jacquet de La Guerre: L'inconstante

33.3K streams

33,265

Jacquet de La Guerre: Trio Sonata No. ...

26.4K streams

26,351

Jacquet de La Guerre: Trio Sonata No. ...

24.4K streams

24,448

Élisabeth Jacquet de La Guerre: Judit...

16.7K streams

16,692

Jacquet de la Guerre: Sonates pour le ...

6K streams

5,958

Biography

Elizabeth-Claude Jacquet de la Guerre was the most famous female composer of the Baroque era, known for several instrumental and vocal works. She was also a celebrated harpsichordist and one of King Louis XIV’s favorite performers. She was born into a wealthy family of musicians and instrument makers in Paris 1665. Her father, Claude Jacquet, worked as a church organist and harpsichord maker and was also the source of her earliest musical instruction. At the age of five, she began performing for King Louis XIV at the palace of Versailles, and eventually earned the title "la petite merveille" ("the small wonder"). She remained a regular musician in the king’s court until her teens, when the king decided to provide her with the best possible education, supervised by his mistress, Françoise-Athénaïs, marquise de Montespan. In September 1684 Jacquet married organist Marin de la Guerre, and they moved back to Paris. She was very successful as a performer and she also taught and composed. By 1687 her first published work was printed, le Premier livre de pieces de clavessin. She also composed a ballet in 1691, Les jeux à l'honneur de la Victoire, which is now lost, and an opera in 1694, Céphale et Procris. The next decade of her life was very difficult with the passing of her husband, parents, brother, and her only son at the young age of ten. However, she kept composing and performed a series of concerts at her home that proved to be wildly popular. She also composed her violin sonatas, and Pièces de clavecin qui peuvent se jouer sur le violon during this period. From 1708 to 1721, in a departure from instrumental music, she composed many vocal works, including 12 sacred cantatas, an additional three secular cantatas on mythological subjects, and also a Te Deum, which is unfortunately lost. Jacquet gradually stopped performing and retired in 1717 but continued to compose into her final years. ~ RJ Lambert, Rovi