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Pièces and 1
* Audio of " 24 Pièces en style libre pour orgue ou harmonium ", book 1 book 2, played on a virtual organ
* François Couperin – Pièces de clavecin, book 1

Pièces and 2
** RCT 2Pièces de clavecin ( 1724 ) – Suite in E minor
* 24 Pièces de fantaisie: Günther Kaunzinger, organ ; Novalis ; 2 CDs
* François Couperin – Pièces de clavecin, book 2
Pièces pour 2 pianos, Ruth Laredo, Jacques Rouvier ; Bolero, Mother Goose Suite, Sites Auriculaires, Frontispièce, La Valse.

Pièces and 3
** RCT 3Pièces de clavecin ( 1724 ) – Suite in D major
* François Couperin – Pièces de clavecin, Book 3
129, for solo piano ( which is played with the left hand only ) as well as 3 Pièces ( played with the right one only ).

Pièces and by
* Pièces roses ( Paris: Calmann-Lévy, 1942 ) – comprises " Le Bal des voleurs ," " Le Rendez-vous de Senlis ," and Léocadia ;" Le Bal des voleurs translated by Lucienne Hill as Thieves ' Carnival ( London: Methuen, 1952 ); Le Rendez-vous de Senlis translated by Edwin O. Marsh as Dinner with the Family ( London: Methuen, 1958 ); Léocadia translated by Patricia Moyes as Time Remembered ( London: S. French, 1954 ).
* Pièces noires ( Paris: Calmann-Lévy, 1942 ) – comprises " L ' Hermine ," " La Sauvage ," " Le Voyageur sans bagage ," and " Eurydice ;" L ' Hermine translated by Miriam John as The Ermine, in Jean Anouilh.
* Pièces brillantes ( Paris: La Table Ronde, 1951 ) – comprises " L ' Invitation au château ," " Colombe ," " La Répétition, ou L ' Amour puni ," and " Cécile, ou L ' Ecole des pères ;" L ' Invitation au château translated by Christopher Fry as Ring round the Moon ( London: Methuen, 1950 ); Colombe translated by Louis Kronenberger as Mademoiselle Colombe ( New York: Coward-McCann, 1954 ).
* Pièces grinçantes ( Paris: La Table ronde, 1956 ) – comprises " Ardèle, ou La Marguerite ," " La Valse des Toréadors ," " Ornifle, ou Le Courant d ' air ," and " Pauvre Bitos, ou Le Dîner de têtes ;" Ardèle, ou La Marguerite translated by Hill as Ardèle ( London: Methuen, 1951 ); La Valse des Toréadors translated by Hill as Waltz of the Toreadors ( London: Elek, 1953 ; New York: Coward-McCann, 1953 ); Ornifle, ou Le Courant d ' air translated by Hill as It's Later Than You Think ( Chicago: Dramatic, 1970 ); Pauvre Bitos, ou Le dîner de têtes translated by Hill as Poor Bitos ( London: Methuen, 1956 ).
* Nouvelles Pièces grinçantes ( Paris: La Table Ronde, 1970 )-- includes " L ' Hurluberlu, ou Le Réactionnaire amoureux ," " La Grotte ," " L ' Orchestre ," " Le Boulanger, la boulangère, et le petit mitron ," and " Les Poissons rouges, ou Mon Père, ce héros ;" " L ' Orchestre " translated by John as " The Orchestra ," in Jean Anouilh.
" Camille Saint-Saëns ( by editing and publishing the Pièces in 1895 ) and Paul Dukas were two other important French musicians who gave practical championship to Rameau's music in their day, but interest in Rameau petered out again, and it was not until the late 20th century that a serious effort was made to revive his works.
" In fact, the two genres were sometimes combined in a single composition, as in the Cento partite sopra passacagli by Girolamo Frescobaldi, and the first suite of Les Nations ( 1726 ) as well as in the Pièces de Violes ( 1728 ) by François Couperin.
The first book written in verse by a Canadian was Épîtres, Satires, Chansons, Épigrammes et Autres Pièces de vers by Michel Bibaud, published in 1830.
Brahms performed Couperin's music in public and contributed to the first complete edition of Couperin's Pièces de clavecin by Friedrich Chrysander in the 1880s.
Only one collection of organ music by Couperin survives, the Pièces d ' orgue consistantes en deux messes (" Pieces for Organ Consisting of Two Masses "), the first manuscript of which appeared around 1689-90.
In that work, Rousseau defended Sainte Colombe's innovations in left-hand technique, and systematically refuted the attacks made by Le Sieur de Machy in the preface to his Pièces de violle ( 1685 ) ( Green 2001 ).
Facsimiles of all five books of Marais ' Pièces de viole are published by Éditions J. M.
Since 2001, Bernadette has been a leading member of the " Pièces Jaunes ," a charity that aids children in French hospitals by collecting small change.
While there, he made award-winning recordings of the complete Pièces de Clavecin by Rameau.
They recorded the Banks Trio, the Brahms Trio, and Quatre Petites Pièces by Charles Koechlin for Tudor records.
The essay opens with a quote by Paul Valéry from Pièces Sur L ’ Art ( The Conquest of Ubiquity ) that argues that the art that was developed in the past differs from that of the present time and hence our understanding and treatment of it must develop in order to understand it in a modern context and develop new techniques.

Pièces and .
Two other collections, Pièces de luth sur trois différens modes nouveaux ( c. 1669 ) and Livre de tablature [...] de Mr. Gaultier Sr. de Nève et de Mr. Gaultier son cousin ( c. 1672 ) both begin with basic instructions on lute playing.
* Terpsichore is also found in François Couperin's " Second Ordre " from the Pièces de clavecin.
Here, in 1706, he published his earliest known compositions: the harpsichord works that make up his first book of Pièces de clavecin, which show the influence of his friend Louis Marchand.
* Pièces de clavecin.
* 24 Pièces en style libre op.
* Charles Vatel, Charlotte Corday et les Girondins: Pièces classées et annotées.
The Bibliothèque des croisades, in four volumes more, contained the " Pièces justificatives " of the Histoire.
* Douze Pièces pour orgue ou piano-pédalier ( 1889 ), including the famous Toccata in G ( no.
* Douze Pièces Nouvelles pour orgue ou piano-pédalier ( 1893 ), including In Paradisum ( no.
Franck's Trois Pièces were premiered on the Trocadéro organ.

Célèbres and 1
1, Boston: The Boston Book Co., Causes Célèbres, Hélène Jégado, pp. 493 – 497.

Célèbres and by
Grandier's trials were the subject of two treatments by Alexandre Dumas, père: an entry in volume four of his Crimes Célèbres ( 1840 ) and a play, Urbain Grandier ( 1850 ).

Célèbres and .
With this legal handbook of criminal cases in the tradition of the famous " Causes Célèbres " of the Franch lawyer Gayot de Pitaval ( 1673 – 1743 ) Feuerbach intend to establish a modern criminal psychology (" Seelenkunde ") for crime investigation, criminal judges, etc.
The phrase originated with the 37-volume Nouvelles Causes Célèbres, published in 1763.
* Sarah Maza, Private Lives and Public Affairs-The Causes Célèbres of Prerevolutionary France, University of California Press, 1993.
Les Pianistes Célèbres.

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