Dandrieu’s Premier Livre de Pièces d’Orgue was printed a year after the composer died in 1738. It contains six suites of pieces in differing church tones, each followed by six versets suitable for performance under the canticle Magnificat.
While the Magnificat verses have a logical sequence, the other movements in the suites are somewhat haphazardly planned. Even setting aside the Pascal hymn in the Premier Suite, the remaining pieces have no apparent order, perhaps reflecting a desire to make the publication as generally useful as possible. The first suite’s two fugues are the only cantus firmus pieces in the collection and are based on the hymn Ave Maris Stella and the Pascal proclamation Exultet coelum laudibus (CD 1: 3 and 4). Like the remaining fugues, which are independent, the style is serious: each is marked Majestueusement [sic] and follows the prescriptions of several composers’ prefaces from the late 17th and early 18th centuries. While no fugues from this epoch are as carefully crafted as those of the Rouennais organist Jehan Titelouze (Paris, 1623 and 1626), their placing within organised organ masses and hymns, often as the second verset of a Kyrie, Gloria or hymn, demonstrates an underlying association between genre and rhetoric. We see similar associations with the opening movements of each Magnificat set, but they work on two levels. They are austere and reserved solely for a plein jeu combination of stops: foundation stops from 16 feet to both mixtures but without reeds. According to André Raison they are to be played solemnly with absolute finger legato. A second rhetorical association is the link between registration and text. It has been mentioned that fugues were often used as the second verse of hymns and in mass sections, and a similar association between a plein jeu and the first Kyrie, Gloria or Sanctus, or the first verse of a psalm or canticle exists in nearly every organ composer’s publication until late into the 18th century. This is not by accident since associating sounds and text would help guide congregants – many of whom were neither literate nor conversant with Latin – through the complexities of the ceremony. Indeed, such an association is well within the ceremonials’ inclusive philosophies.
Several commentators associate plein jeu pieces with Titelouze, and while the registration provides a link with the north European school of organ playing, particularly of such composers from Flanders and the Spanish Netherlands as Jan Pieterzoon Sweelinck, other genres are decidedly more French. Thus, we have bourrées (e.g., Duo, Magnificat V; CD2: 15), menuets (e.g., Basse de Cromorne, Magnificat III; CD1: 33), gavottes (e.g., Trio, Magnificat V; CD2: 16), gigues (Magnificat IV; CD2: 5), Italianate gigas (Duo, Magnificat III; CD1: 26) and, as mentioned previously, rustic dances in the guise of musettes. It is not only dance forms that permeate French organ music, since we also see the influence of the air de cour in the tender récits (e.g., Magnificat III; CD1: 33), concerted viol music in the two Tierce en Taille pieces (Suites IV and V) and even Lullyan ouvertures, which form the basis of the offertoires. These are exclusively reserved for grands jeux combinations that juxtapose concertante and ripieno sections using combinations of reeds, cornets and foundation stops that mimic the grand orchestral writing popular with Parisian apparatchiks of the opera.
Recorded June 2019 at the Georges Küttinger organ (1779), Église Saint-Côme-et-Saint-Damien, Vézelise, France. Booklet in English contains liner notes by Jon Baxendale, a stop list of the organ and a profile of the artist
- Jean-Francois Dandrieu (ca. 1682-1738) was a French Baroque composer and organist. He was a prominent figure in the musical world of Paris and held positions at several prestigious churches including the royal chapel of Saint-Germain-l'Auxerrois. Dandrieu composed numerous pieces for harpsichord and organ, including suites, dances, and hymns. He was also known for his improvisational skills on the keyboard. Dandrieu's music is considered to be representative of the French Baroque style, characterized by its intricate melodies and delicate ornamentation. Despite being widely renowned in his time, Dandrieu's music was largely forgotten in the centuries following his death. However, it has recently seen a resurgence of interest among musicians and musicologists.
- This set presents the Premier livre de Pièces d’Orgue, containing six suites of pieces in differing church tones, each with a sequence of versets suitable for performance under the canticle Magnificat.
- Pieter-Jan Belder plays the historic Georges Kittinger 1779 organ of the Église Saint-Côme--et-Saint-Damien, Vézelise, France, its full specifications included in the booklet.
- Pieter-Jan Belder is one of the world’s foremost keyboard players, with an astonishing number of CDs to his name: the complete Scarlatti Sonatas, Bach keyboard works, Rameau, Soler, Duphly, Marais, CPE Bach, Corelli, Purcell, Telemann, the complete Fitzwilliam Virginal Book...to be continued. Critics praise his versatility, his innate feeling for style, his impeccable technique: “Superb keyboard artistry and consummate technique” (MusicWeb), “alive, fresh-sounding and thoroughly engaged..” (Fanfare), “The most vital Bach performances of the moment” (Volkskrant).
- Belder’s recording of the harpsichord works by Dandrieu is issued on Brilliant Classics 96125.