Concert La Bourrasque by Comet Musicke - Festival Camp de Base
Recital for 2 violas da gamba and one voice around Monsieur de Sainte Colombe (cf. the film Tous les matins du monde), Francisco Mañalich, tenor / viola da gamba and Aude-Marie Piloz on viola da gamba.
Description
Around Sainte-Colombe
Very few details of Jean de Sainte-Colombe's life are known to us. Yet he is one of the most eminent violists of all time, and his contribution to the evolution of the viola da gamba and its repertoire has been considerable. We can be sure that, without him, the viol would not be what it is today: one of the leading instruments of early music, with an extraordinary repertoire. We owe him the use of spun strings (replacing bare gut) for the lower strings, and the addition of the seventh string, which gives the instrument its depth and that characteristic low, resonant color.
Sainte-Colombe spent his life far from the glitz and glamour of the court, but his influence in Parisian musical circles was great: he gave regular concerts at home, notably in the company of his two daughters, Françoise and Brigide, also violists. He was also a renowned pedagogue, whose pupils included Pierre Méliton, Jean Desfontaines, Jean Rousseau and the great Marin Marais.
He is also known to have frequented the luthier Nicolas Collichon, on rue de la Harpe, where Demachy and Dubuisson, other famous violinists, lived. It was Michel Collichon, son of Nicolas, who made the first seven-string bass viol in 1683 (now on display at the Cité de la Musique museum in Paris).
Sainte-Colombe also knew how to surround himself in mystery: when he decided that Marais no longer needed him, he refused to continue teaching him, and Marais had no choice but to hide under the shed in which the master worked, in an attempt to discover his secrets!
Comet Musicke invites you to follow in the footsteps of Monsieur de Sainte-Colombe in seventeenth-century Paris, when his music interacted with that of his contemporaries.
Works by Monsieur de Sainte-Colombe and Sébastien Le Camus.
Environments
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Village center
Rates
Free to participate.
Opening period
Wednesday 22 July 2026 from 6 pm.
Spoken languages
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French
Location
Animals
Pets allowed : No