Jean-Philippe Rameau

@Music Composer, Family and Facts

Jean-Philippe was one of the most influential French composers of his time

Sep 25, 1683

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Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: September 25, 1683
  • Died on: September 12, 1764
  • Nationality: French
  • Famous: Music Composer, Theorist, Musicians
  • Spouses: Marie-Louise Mangot
  • Childrens: Marie-Louise
  • Discoveries / Inventions:
    • Fundamental Bass

Jean-Philippe Rameau born at

Dijon

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Birth Place

Childhood And Early Life Not much is known about Rameau’s early life and the historical data remains very obscure. He was born on September 25th 1683 to an organist father. Jean-Philippe was the seventh of the eleven children the couple had. He was taught music very early on by his father who was an organist in their hometown and Rameau’s only formal musical teacher. Rameau’s parents were not very particular on him becoming a musician and he himself initially aspired to study Law but then realized that his true calling lay with music. As Rameau turned eighteen, his parents eventually gave in and hos father let him travel to Milan for his musical aspirationsPersonal Life When Rameau returned from Milan, he worked his way as a violinist in travelling corporations and then as an organist, in several cathedrals. He was given many provincial positions during the time and moved around the country on a regular basis. The first time he moved to Paris in 1706, he composed and published his music, premiering as a full-fledged musical artist; this piece came to be known as “Premier livre de pieces de clavecin”. After a span of three years, he returned to Dijon to affirm his father’s place at the Notre Dame cathedral. After a brief tenure as an organist with the cathedral, Rameau moved back to Paris which became his permanent base.In the year 1726, Rameau married a 19-year-old Marie-Louise Mangot, who was a budding singer and instrumentalist with a musical background. The wedding was a silent affair, which led to a long, peaceful marriage and the couple had four children together.Early Musical Career As Rameau specifically wanted to compose operas, he worked towards becoming proficient at his goal. Many critics tried to hush his efforts and condemned him for putting efforts in an area which he supposedly was not capable of. Many opera houses also believed that Jean-Philippe Rameau was an amateur and lacked the specific discipline, talent and background to compose opera pieces. However, he set out to achieve his goal and, in due course, wrote the ancillary music to the Opera Comique ‘L’Endriague’, conducted by Alexis Piron, in the year 1723 at one of Paris’s local fair theaters.This won him a great deal of accolades, reputation and admiration, after which, four more collaborations with Piron followed. Rameau continued to write motets, theoretical and opera works and began on a solidifying journey with Piron who introduced him to his future patron, Alexandre-Jean-Joseph.Later Years Towards the beginning of the 1730’s, Jean-Philippe Rameau was employed by La Poupliniere, who, at the time, was known as the richest man in the country with a wealthy estate. His unquenchable love for music and the arts and history suggests that he was also instrumental in launching some talented musicians into the musical foray. This turned out to be a turning point in Rameau’s career as he was introduced to a whole new world of music and with instruments he had never seen or used before. In the year 1733, he staged and performed his first opera at La Poupliniere’s enormous estate and then went on to performing the same production at the Paris Opera. This first dramatic work was known as “Hippolyte et Aricie” and went on to receive a tepid response from the listeners as they found it extremely heavy and complex. There were many debates on whether Rameau’s musical shades would soon overshadow Lully’s opera music, and the divide was equal with half of the listeners condemning Rameau’s attempt at Opera, and the other half supporting his bold performance. Rameau continued to write and compose his second opera, “Les Indes Galantes” and wrote some more to emerge as a successful Opera composer. Despite his successes with Opera music, he never gave up on his theoretical writings. Some of it was even published around the same time of his opera and included his most symbolic works known as “Generation Harmonique”. His career slowly started galloping its way to success, and he was later known for his outstanding contribution to Opera. In 1745, Rameau received the honorary title as royal musician and his list of Opera pieces grew to such an amount, that the Opera houses themselves had to plead him to reduce his productions to give other composers a fair chance. After this, from the years 1750 to 1757, only one of his operas was staged; ‘Les Paladins’. His ill health also gave way which affected his overall productivity that lessened his productions as the years went by. In the year 1752, the noted mathematician Jean D’Alembert made Rameau’s works more accessible to the public and gained him a wider audience by simplifying and translating his works to different languages. Despite all this, Rameau still had a prolonged tiff with Alembert, and lost a great deal of support at the time of the “War of the Buffoons”.

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