Hyacinthe Jadin (1776 – 1800)

The String Quartets

partition, analyse, facsimile
Anthologies Musique instrumentale II,4

for:
2 violins, viola, cello (string quartet)
Musical Editions:
Score (with critical report)
Item no.:
1671180
Author / Composer:
Editor:
Languages:
english, french
Scope:
63/243 pages; 23 × 31 cm
Release year:
2010
Publisher / Producer:
Producer No.:
CMBV062
ISMN:
9790707034620

Description

Éditions du Centre de musique baroque de Versailles publishes the String Quartets by Hyacinthe Jadin. This new critical volume is edited by Philippe Oboussier in the Anthologies: musique instrumentale collection, dedicated to the discovery of remarkable French works from the 17th and 18th centuries. It joins Grétry's Quatuors op. III, Dauvergne's Concerts de symphonies and Rigel's Symphonies.

Hyacinthe Jadin was born in Versailles in 1776. His musical training probably came from his father, who was Ordinaire de la Musique du roi. In 1792, aged just 16, he succeeded his brother Louis-Emmanuel as harpsichordist at the Théâtre Feydeau in Paris. Also a renowned pianist, he was appointed professor at the new Paris conservatory at the age of 19, and composed numerous sonatas and three concertos for his instrument. Although he died prematurely of an illness in 1800, he nonetheless left an abundant and highly mature body of work, which won him the support of an ever-growing musical community.

In his 12 string quartets, Hyacinthe Jadin cultivated a refined style of writing, largely inspired by the Viennese style, which was not very fashionable in France at the time. These works crystallize all the composer's qualities: intensity of writing and expressive power. He used a remarkable harmonic palette, exceptionally broad for the period. Although serious and demanding, they do not present any great playing difficulties.

After an overview of Jadin's life and career, Philippe Oboussier discusses the context in which the string quartet genre evolved in France between 1780 and 1790. He highlights Jadin's contribution and originality, which place the French composer in the tradition of the two most famous exponents of the Viennese style: Haydn and Mozart. The study is supported by a comparison of Mozart's "Dissonances" quartet in C KV.465 with Jadin's beautiful String Quartet in E-flat op. 2 no. 1, whose many similarities suggest a tribute to its elder. Accompanied by facsimile reproductions, the introduction (in French and English) is followed by the music of all 12 string quartets, as well as abundant critical notes. Each of the quartets is available in separate parts for performance.

Philippe Oboussier, a graduate of King's College Cambridge, directed and taught in music schools for 25 years. In the 1970s, he edited and performed Lalande's grands motets and discovered new petits motets by François Couperin. While exploring French chamber music of the late 18th century, he found the quartets of Hyacinthe Jadin. He revealed them to the public during a symposium in Lyon in 1989, and devoted his doctoral thesis to them, defended at Exeter University in 2005.

Content

  • Quatuor op. 1 n°1
  • Quatuor op. 1 n°2
  • Quatuor op. 1 n°3
  • Quatuor op. 2 n°1
  • Quatuor op. 2 n°2
  • Quatuor op. 2 n°3
  • Quatuor op. 3 n°1
  • Quatuor op. 3 n°2
  • Quatuor op. 3 n°3
  • Quatuor op. 4 n°1
  • Quatuor op. 4 n°2
  • Quatuor op. 4 n°3
120.00  €
incl. VAT, plus shipping
Delivery time: 2–4 weeks.
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