Thomas-Louis Bourgeois

Thomas-Louis Bourgeois (Fontaine-l'Évêque, Hainaut, Belgium 24 October 1676 - Paris, January 1750 or 1751) was a Walloon composer and haute-contre. He was maître de chapelle at Toul Cathedral, then Strasbourg Cathedral before employment from 1707 until 1711 at the Opéra de Paris as a singer.[1][2] He worked in the service of the Duke of Bourbon between 1715 and 1721, after which he became the director of the Théâtre de la Monnaie in Brussels (1722-1724). This appointment was the start of the era of his professional life in which he travelled from one city to the next, taking him to Lille, Lyons, Poitiers, Dijon, Belgium and the Netherlands. Little is known about the last years of his life. He died in poverty in Paris. Bourgeois mainly wrote cantatas, ballets, and divertissements.[3]

Works, editions and recordings

  • Les Amours déguisés (1713)
  • Les Plaisirs de la Paix (1715).
  • Cantatas: Les Sirènes. Borée. Zéphire et Flore. Hippomène. Psiché Carolyn Sampson Le Concert Lorrain Carus 2012
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gollark: I mean that the squirrel can probably be dropped from a lower height and die.
gollark: That seems inefficient.
gollark: So the squirrel dies of starvation? I don't think you actually need that.
gollark: How's that derived?

References

  1. Thomas-Louis Bourgeois (1676-1750/51) - Anne Delvare - 2007 - 1196 pages - This thesis offers the most complete biography of the musician.
  2. Performing baroque music - Page 80 Mary Cyr - 1992 Thomas-Louis Bourgeois (1676-1750 or 1751) provides one of the few directions for registration in harpsichord continuo passages. For a delicate air from his cantata Psiché with obbligato viol, Bourgeois specifies the upper manual on the ..."
  3. David Tunley. Bourgeois, Thomas-Louis [Joseph] on Grove Music Online (subscription required)
Preceded by
Louise Dimanche
director of the Théâtre de la Monnaie
1722-1724
Succeeded by
Marianne Dujardin
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