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Henri Dumont
Henri Dumont
Belgian composer
1
François Couperin
François Couperin
French Baroque composer, organist and harpsichordist
2
Michel Corrette
Michel Corrette
French organist and composer
3
Désiré Dondeyne
Désiré Dondeyne
French conductor
4
Marc-Antoine Charpente
Marc-Antoine Charpente
17th-century French composer
5
Christophe Rousset
Christophe Rousset
French musician
6
Claude Balbastre
Claude Balbastre
French composer
7
Jean-Baptiste Lully
Jean-Baptiste Lully
Italian-born French composer
8
Hervé Niquet
Hervé Niquet
French musician
9
Joseph-Nicolas-Pancrace Royer
Joseph-Nicolas-Pancrace Royer
French harpsichordist and composer
10
Jean-Philippe Rameau
Jean-Philippe Rameau
French Baroque composer and music theorist
11
François Francoeur
François Francoeur
French composer and violinist
12
Robert Planel
Robert Planel
French composer, musicologist and music educator
13
Jacques Champion de Chambonnières
Jacques Champion de Chambonnières
French composer and harpsichordist
14
Florent Schmitt
Florent Schmitt
French composer
15
Gustav Leonhardt
Gustav Leonhardt
Dutch keyboard player, conductor, musicologist, teacher and editor
16
Naji Hakim
Naji Hakim
Lebanese-French composer, organist and improviser
17
Dietrich Buxtehude
Dietrich Buxtehude
Danish-German organist and composer
Jean-Adam Guilain
German composer living in Paris

Jean-Adam Guilain

Intro
German composer living in Paris
Music

Jean-Adam Guilain (real name Johann Adam Wilhelm Freinsberg) (c. 1680 – after 1739) was a German organist and harpsichordist who was mostly active in Paris during the first half of the eighteenth century.

Little is known about his life. He was born in Germany, possibly around 1680 (the exact dates of birth and death are unknown). For an unknown reason he moved to France some time before 1702, and almost certainly became one of Louis Marchand's pupils - Guilain's organ collection is dedicated to Marchand, by then a prominent organ teacher. Guilain died some time after 1739, the year when he published a collection of harpsichord pieces. A unique copy may be found in the collection of the British Library. The volume is entitled "PIECES DE CLAVECIN / D'UN GOUT NOUVEAU / PAR Mr. GUILAIN./ Gravées par De Gland Graveur du Roy./ Prix 3l./ A PARIS. The 26 pieces of this anthology, carry the following titles:

Fanfare - Je veux Garder - Le Beau B.T. - Amis - Ton H.C. - Babé L.R. - Joconde - Mirtil - Mon Cousin - Tircis Couché - Ma Cloris - L'autre jour - Mamy Margot - O Gué - Pierre B.- Les Pelerins 1er Air - 2e Air - Boire a son tour - je suis encor - Bransle de Metz - On dit - Allons - La Tétard - Menuet Allemand

Although he came from Germany, Guilain's musical style appears to be in the pure French tradition.

A single collection of organ pieces (Pièces d'orgue pour le Magnificat sur les huit tons différents de l'église) was published in 1706 in two volumes, of which only one is now extant. The full collection included eight suites of pieces for use with the Magnificat, one suite for each church mode. Each suite contained seven short movements that were to alternate with the vocal parts of the liturgy.

  • Suite du premier ton :
Plein jeu - Trio - Duo - Basse de trompette - Récit - Dialogue - Petit plein jeu
  • Suite du deuxième ton :
Prélude - Tierce en taille - Duo - Basse de trompette - Trio de flûtes - Dialogue - Petit plein jeu
  • Suite du troisième ton :
Plein jeu - Quatuor - Dialogue de voix humaine - Basse de trompette - Duo - Grand jeu - Petit plein jeu
  • Suite du quatrième ton :
Plein jeu - Cromorne en taille - Duo - Basse de cromorne - Trio - Dialogue - Petit plein jeu