Joseph Boulogne, Chevalier de Saint-Georges (ca. 1745-1799)
Violin Concertos, Vol. 2
In an age of remarkable individuals Joseph Boulogne, le
Chevalier de Saint-Georges occupies a unique position as an athlete, violin
virtuoso and composer. The son of a French colonial planter and a beautiful
Senegalese slave, Joseph Boulogne was born near Basse Terre, Guadeloupe, and
lived for some time on an estate on St Domingue before his family finally
settled in Paris in around 1749. In his early teens Saint-Georges became a
pupil of the famous master of arms La Boëssière and also had riding lessons with
Dugast at the Tuileries. He fought his first public fencing match in Paris with
Giuseppe Gianfaldoni on 8th September 1766 and, although he lost, his opponent
predicted that Saint-Georges would become the finest swordsman in Europe.
Virtually
nothing is known about the musical education of Saint-Georges, although early
accounts of his life claim that he had lessons with Platon, his father's
plantation manager on St Domingue, and it has been suggested that he later
studied violin with Leclair and composition with Gossec in France. As the six
years he spent in La Boëssière's establishment were devoted exclusively to
physical training and academic studies it has been assumed that the bulk of his
musical education took place between 1758 and 1769, the year of his first
professional engagement, as a violinist in Gossec's Concert des Amateurs. It
seems more than likely that Gossec encouraged Saint-Georges's ambitions as a
composer and may have offered him professional advice even if no formal
pupil-teacher relationship existed. Saint-Georges made his public debut as a
soloist with the Concert des Amateurs in 1772, performing his two violin
concertos Op. 2. When Gossec became a director of the Concert Spirituel in
1773, Saint-Georges succeeded him as musical director and leader of the
Amateurs which rapidly won recognition as one of the finest orchestras in
France.
In 1777 Saint-Georges made his debut as an opera composer
with Ernestine at the Comedie-Italienne and in the course of the same year he
became affiliated to the private theatre and concerts of Mme de Montesson who
was secretly married to the Duke of Orleans. Utilising Saint-Georges's other
talents, the duke put him in charge of his hunting retinue at his seat in Le
Raincy.
After the disbanding of the Amateurs in January 1781,
probably owing to ongoing financial problems, Saint-Georges founded the Concert
de la Loge Olympique, the orchestra for whom Count d'Ogny commissioned Haydn to
compose his brilliant set of six 'Paris' symphonies. On the death of the Duke
of Orleans in 1785 Saint-Georges lost his position in the household and visited
London, where he gave exhibition fencing matches at Angelo's Academy. He
returned to Paris in 1787, composed a moderately successful comedy, La
fille-garçon, and resumed work with the Loge Olympique.
Within six months of the outbreak of the Revolution, the
Loge Olympique was dissolved and Saint-Georges returned to England in the
company of the young Duke of Orleans, Philippe-Egalite. Once again,
Saint-Georges supported himself by giving exhibition fencing matches in London
and, this time, fought in Brighton before the Prince of Wales. He returned to
Paris in 1790, undertook a tour of northern France with the actress Louise
Fusil and the horn-player Lamothe. Two years later, now resident in Lille, he
became captain of the National Guard. He formed a corps of light troops in the
summer of 1792 which was planned to consist of one thousand black soldiers.
Known as the Legion Nationale du Midi, the corps enjoyed little military
success. Saint-Georges was relieved of his command, imprisoned for eighteen
months, and upon his release forbidden to live anywhere near his former
legionnaires.
In the harsh economic climate of Revolutionary France
Saint-Georges found life difficult in the extreme. He led a vagabond existence
with Lamothe and for a time returned to St Dominque. By 1797 he was back in
Paris, where he served briefly as a director of a new musical organization, the
Cercle de l'Harmonie. He died in Paris in June 1799.
Saint-Georges's relatively small musical output can perhaps
be best explained by the demands on his time made by his many and varied
activities. The majority of his instrumental works were published in Paris
between 1772 and 1779 and include string quartets, violin concertos and
symphonies concertantes. The concertos, which were written for his own use,
reveal Saint-Georges to have been an exceptional player, comfortable in the
execution of bravura passage work in the highest positions, and capable of agile
string crossings and double-stopping in fast tempos. Louise Fusil wrote that
'the expressiveness of his performance was his principal merit' and indeed
there is far more to his concertos than mere virtuosic display. His lyrical
gifts are very apparent, especially in the slow movements which eschew the
complex ornamentation typical of the early classical concerto. Although the
first movements are structurally sound and well written they are perhaps a
little long on occasion for the material upon which they are built, a not
uncommon characteristic of the concerto as a genre. Saint-Georges favours the
fashionable Rondeau finale in many of his concertos and invariably introduces
appealing new thematic material in the episodes.
The three works on this recording present an interesting
picture of Saint-Georges's career as a composer of concertos. The earliest of
the works, the Concerto in D major, Op. 3 No. 1, is one of a pair of concertos
by Saint-Georges that was issued by the Parisian publisher Bailleux in 1773. It
was probably composed for performance with the Concert des Amateurs following
Saint-Georges's enormously successful debut in the previous year with the two
Concertos, Op. 2. The modernity of the first movement strikes one immediately
with its brisk, purposeful orchestral writing and broad, classical phrasing. It
is a far cry from the old-fashioned style of concerto first movement still
being written by Viennese composers such as Haydn, Hofmann and Dittersdorf and
the solo writing has a brightness and freshness which is at once distinctive
and highly appealing. The beautiful slow movement immediately brings to mind
Louise Fusil's praise of Saint-Georges's expressive style of playing. The
concluding Rondeau, the theme of which is in the style of an elegant minuet,
conjours up vivid images of life in the ancien regime.
Concerto No. 10 in G major was probably composed reasonably
close to its publication in ca 1777 and like the earlier concertos was
doubtless first performed by Saint-Georges with the Amateurs. Similar in style to the earlier
concertos, the work abounds with attractive melodies and impressive bravura
work for the soloist. Interestingly enough, it shares its beautiful slow
movement with the Concerto in A major, Op. 5 No. 2, which was written around
1800 as far as it is possible to determine. There are a few minor points of
difference between the two versions although these may well represent
transmission errors in the score or parts used by Sieber to prepare the print.
In place of Saint-Georges's customary rondo finale is a large-scale movement
cast in the hybrid sonata-ritornello form most commonly encountered in first
movements. This brilliant concerto is one of the most attractive and
distinguished violin concertos of the period and had Mozart seen Saint-Georges
play it while he was in Paris in 1778 he would have heard many things in it to
admire.
The Concerto in D major, Op. Post. No. 2, was issued
posthumously by the composer-publisher Ignaz Pleyel about the year 1800. Given
Saint-Georges's reputation and popularity in the pre-Revolutionary period it is
hard to believe that he would not have published the work had it existed. From
the outer movements there is little to suggest that the work was composed later
than his other concertos. The extraordinary central movement, however, is quite
unlike anything heard in the concertos composed in the 1770s. The gripping
opening with its rhapsodic solo part gives way to a beautiful theme, written
for the violin in its low and middle registers, which is then followed by a
second theme, rather in the manner of one of Haydn's sets of alternating
variations. The first of these themes is then repeated with a wonderful,
spirited variation in the solo part but the second theme does not return. This
curious and highly original movement is followed by a sparkling rondo built
around one of Saint-Georges's most irresistible themes.
Allan Badley