Nicolas Dezède

Nicolas-Alexandre Dezède (c.1740 in Lyon – 11 September 1798, in Paris) was an 18th-century French composer born from unknown parents.

Dezède presented a great many number of opéras comiques, of which several were popular, at the Théâtre italien de Paris. He served the Duke des Deux-Ponts from 1749 to 1790. A freemason, he was initiated at the lodge Les Neuf Sœurs in Paris.[1]

Main operas

  • 1772: Julie (28 September) ;
  • 1777: Les Trois Fermiers ;
  • 1783: Blaise et Babet ;
  • 1784: Le Véritable Figaro ;
  • 1785: Alexis et Justine.
gollark: I don't think it's "best" for development still. Linux still has great tooling for that without mucking with all the Windows nonsense.
gollark: And Windows 10 got its own exciting problems. Like forced updates, *advertising* inside it, random installation of useless junk...
gollark: It's more, well, less bad.
gollark: I'm not sure about "best".
gollark: I've got three-level "antivirus" in that I'm not insanely stupid, I run Linux and few virus authors bother to target it, and I install most stuff from my distro's package manager.

References

  1. Le cosmopolitisme musical à Paris à la fin du XVIIIe siècle par Pierre-François Pinaud chroniques d'histoire maçonnique n°.63

Bibliography

Alessandro Di Profio, Dezède (Familie), MGG (Die Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart), new edition : Kassel, Bärenreiter, 1997, éd. Ludwig Finscher, vol. 5, coll. 961–963

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.