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About this concert
They have a Dutch name, but they come from France: Quatuor Van Kuijk. In the Netherlands, the young quartet is not very well known yet, but no doubt this is about to change. Their recent albums with Mendelssohn’s complete string quartets have been showered with praise. Tonight at the Muziekgebouw, the Van Kuijk Quartet takes listeners on a captivating journey through French music. The programme features iconic 20th-century composers in dialogue with the contemporary voice of Baptiste Trotignon. Trotignon is a jazz pianist and composer who cares little about genre boundaries – he knows his classics, but also plays songs by Led Zeppelin and David Bowie. In his new Ces messieurs (‘These gentlemen’) for the Van Kuijk, Trotignon gives a salute to France’s great impressionists, such as Claude Debussy, Gabriel Fauré, and Erik Satie. The Van Kuijk also plays pieces by the gentlemen themselves, as found on their latest CD, Impressions Parisiennes. They top it off with Ravel’s phenomenal String Quartet in F (1903), which won the admiration of Debussy – and many others.
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Francis Poulenc
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Baptiste Trotignon
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Quatuor Van Kuijk
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About the venue

Muziekgebouw is Amsterdam's concert hall for contemporary and newly composed music as well as related genres such as classical, jazz, electronic and global music. More th...
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Francis Poulenc Biography

Francis Jean Marcel Poulenc (January 7, 1899 - January 30, 1963) was a French composer and a member of the French Group Les Six.

He was a Parisian by birth and death, and always preferred the city to the country. His mother, an amateur pianist, taught him to play, and music formed a part of family life.

Poulenc was a member of Les Six, a group of young French composers, Darius Milhaud, Georges Auric, Louis Durey, Arthur Honegger and Germaine Tailleferre, who also had links with Erik Satie and Jean Cocteau. He embraced the dada movement's techniques, creating melodies that would have been appropriate for Parisian music halls. An outstanding pianist, the keyboard dominated much of his early compositions. He also, throughout his career, borrowed from his own compositions as well as those of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Camille Saint-Saëns.

He composed music in all major genres, including art song, chamber music, oratorio, opera, ballet music and orchestral music. Among Poulenc's last series of major works is a series of works for Winds and Piano. He was particularly fond of the woodwind instruments, and planned a set of sonatas for all of them, yet only lived to complete four: the Flute Sonata (1956), and sonatas for oboe, clarinet and horn.

Poulenc's Rapsodie nègre (1917), written for baritone, piano, string quartet, flute, and clarinet, sets nonsense syllables purportedly by a black Liberian poet. The piece, dedicated to Erik Satie, kept him out of the Paris Conservatoire, composition teacher Paul Vidal saying, according to Poulenc, "Your work stinks, it's inept, infamous balls... Ah! I see you're a follower of the Igor Stravinsky and Erik Satie gang. Well, goodbye!" Stravinsky, hearing of this story, arranged to have the piece printed.

Later in his life, the loss of some close friends, coupled with a pilgrimage to the Black Madonna of Rocamadour, led him to rediscovery of his faith and resulted in compositions of a more sombre, austere tone. His opera, Les Dialogues des Carmelites was written at this time.

France
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