Henri Larrivée Explained

Henri Larrivée (9 January 1737 – 7 August 1802) was a French opera singer. He was born in Lyon. His voice range was basse-taille (equivalent to baritone).[1] According to Fétis, Larrivée was working as an apprentice to a wigmaker when the head of the Paris Opéra, Rebel, noticed his talent for singing and hired him as a chorus member.[2] He made his first solo appearance as a high priest in a 1755 revival of Rameau's Castor et Pollux.[3] He was particularly associated with the works of Christoph Willibald Gluck, helping Gluck establish his "reform operas" in France. He found Gluck's rival, Niccolò Piccinni, less congenial but still worked with him on the premieres of operas including Roland (1778).[4] After already getting a pension in 1779, he retired from the Académie Royale de Musique in 1786 and devoted most of the time he had left to live to tour around with his two daughters, Camille (later known as Mme Delaval) and Henriette, who played respectively harp and violin.[5]

The 19th-century writer Émile Campardon described Larrivée thus: "The artist, who had everything – a good figure, a wide range, a flexible voice, and acting that was both natural and intelligent – deserved the applause he received over a career spanning more than thirty years. Almost every new work in which he appeared was a success." Fétis claimed that Larrivée had a tendency to turn nasal on high notes and quoted a joke from a member of the audience: "There's a nose with a good voice!"[6]

Larrivée was married to the soprano Marie-Jeanne Lemière (1733—1786), later known as Madame Larrivée.

Roles created

Larrivée was the first singer to perform the following parts:[7]

Larrivée was also due to play the role of Arcalaüs in Johann Christian Bach's Amadis de Gaule but was forced to withdraw for health reasons.

References

  1. Dratwicki, p. 85
  2. Fétis p. 199
  3. Rushton p. 268
  4. Rushton p. 269
  5. Pitou, p. 324
  6. Fétis p. 200 ("").
  7. Pitou, pp. 322–323

Sources