Personne : Jean-Joseph Rodolphe

Titre Date Rôle
Les Caprices de Galatée 1776-10-06 compositeur
Apelle et Campaspe 1776-10-01 compositeur
Nanine, sœur de lait de la reine de Golconde 1773 compositeur
L’Aveugle de Palmyre 1767-03-05 compositeur
Le Mariage par capitulation 1764-12-03 compositeur
Isménor 1773-11-17 compositeur
Les Danaïdes 1764-02-11 compositeur
Médée 1762 compositeur

  • Grove Music Online
    [extrait de:] Elisabeth COOK: 'Rodolphe, Jean Joseph', Grove Music Online ed. L. Macy (Accessed 2 July 2004), http://www.grovemusic.com :
    "Rodolphe, Jean Joseph [Rudolph, Johann Joseph] (b Strasbourg, 14 Oct 1730; d Paris, 12 or 18 Aug 1812). Alsatian composer active in France. He was taught counterpoint by Traetta in Parma and continued his studies with Jommelli in Stuttgart, where he composed the ballets Renaud et Armide (1761), Psyche et l’Amour (1762) and Médée et Jason (1763) for Noverre. […] He settled in Paris a few years after the unsuccessful staging of his first opéra comique, Le mariage par capitulation (1764), which received only one performance. L’aveugle de Palmire (1767), another unambitious opéra comique in the pastoral style with sentimental overtones, remained in the repertory for slightly longer and was restaged, with a sumptuous mise-en-scène, at Fontainebleau in 1776. […] Two further works received premières at court in 1773: Isménor, written for the wedding of the Count of Artois (later Charles X) and Marie-Thérèse of Savoy, and Nanine, a parody of Monsigny’s Aline, reine de Golconde (1766)."
    AS