- Louis-Antoine Dornel
Louis-Antoine Dornel (c. 1685 - c. 1765), was a French
composer ,harpsichordist ,organist andviolinist , who lived inParis .Dornel was probably taught by the organist
Nicolas Lebègue . He was appointed organist at the church of Sainte-Marie-Madeleine-en-la-Cité in 1706, where he took over fromFrançois d'Agincourt . He was runner-up in the competition for the post toJean-Philippe Rameau , who eventually refused the terms set by the church authorities. He occupied several organist posts in Paris over a period from 1714 to 1748. In 1719 he was appointed to theabbey of Sainte-Geneviève , following the death ofAndré Raison .From 1725 to 1742, Dornel was appointed successor to du Boussetto as the music master of the
Académie Française . He was required to compose a large-scalemotet for choir and orchestra to be performed by the Académie each year on the feast of Saint Louis (August 25th), but none survive. Dornel's works for harpsicord and for organ were well-regarded at the time, theMercure de France stating that they were "fort estimées et de très facile exécution".We know little more about the rest of his career, other than that his last surviving organ manuscript is dated 1756.
As Dornel was not a salaried court musician, he had to respond to the tastes of the concert societies set up by the French aristocracy, and in particular to the popularity of the
sonata form promoted by the Italian-educatedMarc-Antoine Charpentier , as well as traditionalsuites of French dances.His surviving work includes:
* four books ofchamber music - "Livre de simphonies contenant six suites en trio avec une sonate en quatuor" (1709), "Sonates à violon seul et suites pour la flûte traversière avec la basse" (1711), "Sonates en trio pour les flûtes allemandes, violons, hautbois" (1713), and "Concerts de simphonies" (1723);
* a collection of pieces for harpsichord (1731) filled with "pieces of character" - miniature movements with evocative titles beloved by thebourgeoisie as made popular byCouperin ;
* vocal music entitled "airs sérieux", published by Ballard in 1706;
* fourcantatas and a series of unpublished organ pieces survive in manuscript (published by Norbert Dufourcq in 1965, ed. Schola Cantorum)He was also author of a book of
music theory published 1745: "Le tour du clavier sur tous les tons".See also
*
List of French harpsichordists
*French organ school To listen to Dornel organ pieces
* http://www.aristote.asso.fr/gui/Compositeurs/Dornel.html
* http://www.aristote.asso.fr/gui/Sons/dornelfugueanches.wavExternal links
*IckingArchive|idx=Dornell|name=Louis-Antoine Dornel
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