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Jean-Baptiste and Lully's
One of the earliest examples in the use of muted string instruments is found in Act II of Jean-Baptiste Lully's Armide, when the entire string section sporadically plays with mutes.
The form is first encountered in Jean-Baptiste Lully's ballet overtures from the 1650s ( Waterman and Anthony 2001 ).
The first performance mentioned in the local newspaper was Jean-Baptiste Lully's, Atys, which was given on 19 November 1700.
When elements of Ariosto's poem supplied Philippe Quinault's libretto for Jean-Baptiste Lully's opera Roland, performed at Versailles, 8 January 1685, Demogorgon was king of the fairies and master of ceremonies.
Many of Chambonnières's misfortunes were almost certainly brought on by the appointment of Jean-Baptiste Lully as Surintendant de la musique de la chambre: learning to perform basso continuo still would have diminished Chambonnières's status at the court, reducing him to a small part of Lully's orchestral force.
Molière had fallen out with the powerful court composer Jean-Baptiste Lully, with whom he had pioneered the comédie-ballet form a decade earlier, and had opted for the collaboration with Charpentier, Lully's rival and arguably a more gifted composer.
" This aria (" What power art thou who from below ") is accompanied by shivering strings, probably influenced by a scene from Act IV of Jean-Baptiste Lully's opera Isis ( 1677 ) but, as Peter Holman writes, Purcell's " daring chromatic harmonies transform the Cold Genius from the picturesque figure of Lully ( or Dryden, for that matter ) into a genuinely awe-inspiring character-the more so because Cupid's responses are set to such frothy and brilliant music.

Jean-Baptiste and opera
He invited Jean-Baptiste Lully to establish the French opera, and a tumultuous friendship was established between Lully and playwright and actor Molière.
In rivalry with imported Italian opera productions, a separate French tradition was founded by the Italian Jean-Baptiste Lully at the court of King Louis XIV.
* Psyché ( opera ), a 1678 opera with music by Jean-Baptiste Lully
* March 22 – Jean-Baptiste Lully, French composer who established opera in France ( b. 1632 )
When it was performed in Paris in 1752, it prompted the so-called Querelle des Bouffons (" quarrel of the comic actors ") between supporters of serious French opera by the likes of Jean-Baptiste Lully and Jean-Philippe Rameau and supporters of new Italian comic opera.
* Jean-Baptiste Lully writes his first opera, Cadmus et Hermione.
* Jean-Baptiste Lully Thésée ( opera, 1674 )
Stylistically refined minuets, apart from the social dance context, were introduced — to opera at first — by Jean-Baptiste Lully, who included no less than 92 of them in his theatrical works ( Little 2001 ) and in the late 17th century the minuet was adopted into the suite, such as some of the suites of Johann Sebastian Bach and George Frideric Händel.
Campra was one of the leading French opera composers in the period between Jean-Baptiste Lully and Jean-Philippe Rameau.
The English semi-opera which developed in the latter part of the 17th century, a form in which John Dryden and Henry Purcell collaborated, borrows some elements from the masque and further elements from the contemporary courtly French opera of Jean-Baptiste Lully.
* Cadmus et Hermione, an opera by Jean-Baptiste Lully
The Orlando narrative inspired several composers, amongst whom were Claudio Monteverdi, Jean-Baptiste Lully, Antonio Vivaldi and George Frideric Handel, who composed an Italian-language opera with Orlando.
Jean-Baptiste Lully is the first known composer to have scored for timpani, which he included in the orchestra for his 1675 opera Thésée.
* Jean-Baptiste Lully ( 1632 – 1687 ), an Italian-born Baroque composer of French opera
He replaced Jean-Baptiste Lully as the dominant composer of French opera and is also considered the leading French composer for the harpsichord of his time, alongside François Couperin.
Jean-Baptiste Lully, who had become well known for composing ballets for Louis XIV, began creating a French version of the Italian opera seria, a kind of tragic opera known as tragédie lyrique or tragédie en musique-see ( French lyric tragedy ).
Armide is an opera by Jean-Baptiste Lully.
* Medusa is played by a countertenor in Jean-Baptiste Lully and Philippe Quinault's opera, Persée ( 1682 ).
* Roland ( Lully ), 17th century opera with music by Jean-Baptiste Lully, and a libretto by Philippe Quinault
* Jean-Baptiste Faure, opera singer, born in Moulins

Jean-Baptiste and Persée
* Prologue for revival of: Persée by Jean-Baptiste Lully ( 1747 ), ( collab.

Jean-Baptiste and also
Colonel Zerbo also encountered resistance from trade unions and was overthrown two years later on November 7, 1982, by Major Dr. Jean-Baptiste Ouédraogo and the Council of Popular Salvation ( CSP ).
* Jean-Baptiste Belley, also known as Mars
Colonel Zerbo also encountered resistance from trade unions and was overthrown two years later on November 7, 1982, by Major Dr. Jean-Baptiste Ouédraogo and the Council of Popular Salvation ( CSP ).
The base was greatly enlarged by Jean-Baptiste Colbert, the minister of Louis XIV, who also commissioned his chief military engineer Vauban to strengthen the fortifications around the city.
One was the talented actor Jean-Baptiste Hamoche ( active 1712 – 1718, 1721 – 1732 ), but there were also acrobats and dancers who appropriated the role, inadvertently reducing Pierrot to a generic type.
But the mention of Watteau should also alert us to the fact that Pierrot, along with his fellow Commedia masks, was beginning to be " poeticized " in this century — that he was beginning to be the subject, not only of poignant folksong (" Au clair de la lune ", sometimes attributed to Lully ), but also of the more ambitious art of Claude Gillot ( Master André's Tomb 1717 ), of Gillot's students Watteau ( Italian Actors 1719 ) and Nicolas Lancret ( Italian Actors near a Fountain 1719 ), of Jean-Baptiste Oudry ( Italian Actors in a Park 1725 ), and of Jean-Honoré Fragonard ( A Boy as Pierrot ).
To publish it in correct form, Jean-Baptiste Biot wrote, he had to consult Stanislas Julien, the famous Sinologist, but also, especially for the translation of the most difficult part, the Kaogongji, he himself had to visit many workshops and questioned artisans and craftsmen about their methods and vocabulary in order to verify his son's work.
Jean-Baptiste Poquelin, better known by his pseudonym Molière, also studied law at the University, but was expelled for attending a carnival contrary to University rules.
There are also an exquisite collection of Greek vases, the world-wide important collection of Paintings of Jean-Baptiste Oudry, a remarkable collection of sculptures of Houdon, German 18th-century court paintings, and works by such modern artists as Max Liebermann, Franz Stuck, Marcel Duchamp etc.
There is also a private Catholic high school, La Salle High School, named after St. Jean-Baptiste de la Salle, and the Portland Waldorf School, a private Waldorf school, which serves grades K-12.
A 800-men cavalry force, comprising squadrons of the élite Imperial Guard Grenadiers à Cheval and Empress Dragoons was also present at the battle under the command of Marshal Jean-Baptiste Bessières.
But in 1671 he contributed to the singular miscellany of Psyché, in which Pierre Corneille and Molière also had a hand, and which was set to the music of Jean-Baptiste Lully.
Henri Zongo and Jean-Baptiste Boukary Lingani were also placed under arrest ; this caused a popular uprising.
Metamagical Themas was also published in French, under the title Ma Thémagie ( InterEditions, 1988 ), the translators being Jean-Baptiste Berthelin, Jean-Luc Bonnetain, and Lise Rosenbaum.
Fénelon also became friendly with the Duc de Beauvilliers and the Duc de Chevreuse, who were married to the daughters of Louis XIV's minister of finance Jean-Baptiste Colbert.
The election, by parliament, of the French Marshal Jean-Baptiste Bernadotte in 1810, provided not only a successor, but also a vital regent and a new dynasty.
Jean-Baptiste Berthelin, also known informally as Cochonfucius, is a French cognitive science researcher.
La Salle is the name of several educational institutions affiliated with the Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools, also known as the Lasallian Brothers, a Roman Catholic religious teaching order founded by French priest Saint Jean-Baptiste de la Salle:
Jean-Baptiste Dubos ( 14 December 1670 – 23 March 1742 ), also referred to as l ' Abbé Du Bos, was a French author.
In 1944 Lee Young was the drummer at Norman Granz's first " Jazz at the Philharmonic " concert, which also featured guitarist Les Paul, trombonist J. J. Johnson, and saxophonist Jean-Baptiste " Illinois " Jacquet, amongst others.
The Guadeloupe Fund () was established by Sweden's Riksdag of the Estates in 1815 for the benefit of Crown Prince and Regent Charles XIV John of Sweden, also known as Jean-Baptiste Bernadotte, and his heirs.
Two partial editions of the text of MS Vatican Syriac 162 published in the nineteenth century ( by the Swedish scholar Otto Fredrik Tullberg in 1850 and by Jean-Baptiste Chabot in 1895 ) also credited Dionysius with its authorship.

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