André Maugars
André Maugars (c. 1580 – c. 1645) was a French viola da gamba player. Marin Mersenne described him, along with Nicolas Hotman as the most excellent French viola da gamba virtuoso, in particular, improviser of diminutions.
He is first identified as a musician attached to Henriette Marie de France, and follows her to London after her marriage to Charles I of England in 1625.[1] He stayed there until about 1627 and was probably in the service of James I of England in his court orchestra. After his return, he published a French translation of the Francis Bacon's letter Advancement of learning. First he worked as a translator at the French court, later for the Cardinal Richelieu. This made him in 1630 the Prior of the Monastery St. Pierre-Eynac in Le Puy-en-Velay. In 1634, he published a translation of another Bacon's letter Considerations Touching on a War with Spain. In 1637 or in the next years, he travelled to Rome. Following this journey, he wrote the account in the form of a letter Response faite à un curieux sur le sentiment de la musique en Italie, escrite à Rome, le 1er octobre 1639 (Response to an Inquisitive Person on the Italian Feeling about Music, wrote in Rome on 1th October 1639). about his experiences from his Italian journey, which was published posthumous in 1672. This account is a valuable historical musical testimony about the contemporary Italian church music, oratorio and instrumental music in comparison with the French music of his time.
References
- Ian Spink, "The Musicians of Queen Henrietta-Maria : some notes and references in the English State Papers", Acta Musicologica 36/2/3 (1964), p. 177-182.
External links
- A. Maugars: Response to an Inquisitive Person on the Italian Feeling about Music from C. MacClinton: Readings in the history of music in performance on Google Books
- Ernest Thoinan, Maugars, célèbre joueur de viole, musicien du Cardinal de Richelieu... : sa biographie, suivie de sa "Response faite a un curieux sur le sentiment de la musique d'Italie, escrite à Rome le premier octobre 1639" : avec notes et éclaircissements. Paris : A. Claudin, 1865 Google books