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Jean-Baptiste Lully [a] (28 November [O.S. 18 November] 1632 – 22 March 1687) was a French composer, dancer and instrumentalist of Italian birth, who is considered a master of the French Baroque music style.
French sources widely attribute to Lully the composition of the British patriotic anthem God Save the King: the sole ultimate source of the attribution is a 19th-century forgery, the Souvenirs of the Marquise de Créquy (q.v.).
Ballard's son, Jean-Baptiste Christophe Ballard (who had been running the printing press with Ballard since 1698) ran the press from 1715 until his death in 1750. During this period, he printed many important works, such as partitions générale of Lully’s Psyché and Campra’s L’Europe Galante [ 3 ] Upon his death, an inventory of the ...
In Quellenstudien zu Jean-Baptiste Lully (L’œuvre de Lully : études des sources. Hommage à Lionel Sawkins. éd., Jérôme de La Gorce et Herbert Schneider). Hildesheim : Olms, 1999, (p. 352-381) [1] (in English) Carl B. Schmidt, Two new Foucault sources of Lully ballets in the United States. Dans Quellenstudien zu Jean-Baptiste Lully = L ...
Jean-Baptiste Lully fils (Paris, 6 August 1665 – 9 March 1743) was a French musician and the second son of the composer Jean-Baptiste Lully. He was also known as Baptiste Lully, Lully fils, and Monsieur Baptiste. He was born and died in Paris. In 1678 at the age of 12, he was given a post by the king, Louis XIV, at the abbey of Saint-Hilaire.
Achille et Polyxène (Achilles and Polyxena) is a tragédie lyrique containing a prologue and five acts based on Virgil's Aeneid with a French libretto by Jean Galbert de Campistron. The opera's overture and first act were composed by Jean-Baptiste Lully, who died from a conducting
Roland (title page) Roland is an opera with music by Jean-Baptiste Lully and a libretto by Philippe Quinault.It was first performed on January 8, 1685, at the Palace of Versailles by the Académie Royale de Musique (Paris Opera) and later, beginning on March 8, 1685, at the company's public theatre in Paris, the Théâtre du Palais-Royal.
Georg Muffat was born in Megève, Duchy of Savoy (now in France), of André Muffat (of Scottish descent) and Marguerite Orsyand. He studied in Paris between 1663 and 1669, where his teacher is often assumed to have been Jean Baptiste Lully.