Jeffrey Wagner, Piano Recorded in the Jim Fellows Center for Creative Media, Park Ridge, Illinois, and published here with the permission of Archbury Classics Recording Company.
Thanks, Louise. How are you doing out there in California? We seem to have light at the end of the pandemic tunnel, although we are not there yet, to be sure. Good to hear from you ! Jeff.
Excuse me, but this music is by Jean-Baptiste Loeillet of London, from his first lesson for the harpsichord. This courante never wrote Lully, a franch composer.
Эту музыку, часть из первого урока для клавесина, написал Жан-Батист Лёйе (Лондонский). А не французский композитор Жан-Батист Люлли. Просто тёзки, имена похожи, но как же горько знать, когда жизнь человека из-за какой-то нелепой распространённой ошибки обесценивается. This music is by Jean-Baptiste Loeillet of London, from his first lesson for the harpsichord. This courante never wrote Lully, a franch composer.
Hi Jeff, My other reply did not go through. Where I am in California, many have been vaccinated but like your area, we will be wearing masks and social distancing for quite awhile yet. I am enjoying part-time in person piano teaching and sight-reading lots of very interesting music. Best to you, Louise
Hi, Louise -- sight-reading I think is one of THE great pleasures in life! I enjoy it to and IMSLP.ORG provides a lot of possibilities in that way. Yours, Jeff
@@jcharwag Thank you for the heads up. I have sometimes found some good collections, but I am often disappointed that a lot of things are not available. Blessings to you as we progress through the remainder of 2021. Louise
Jean-Baptiste Loeillet of London (not his cousin Jean-Baptiste Loeillet of Gand) Lesson No. 1 for the Harpsichord or Spinet in E Minor: III Corant (Formerly Attributed to Jean-Baptiste Lully) (en Français "courante", Leçon attribuée à Lully par similitude des noms en anglais, par son éditeur, Lully étant plus connu)
@@andressousa6361 I found a book in IMSLP of french harpsichord works and this music was added in with Lully as being the composer. So, I believe it was him.
In 17-th century. But this music is by Jean-Baptiste Loeillet of London, from his first lesson for the harpsichord. This courante never wrote Lully, a franch composer.