As he neared the end of his life, Marc-Antoine Charpentier, a composer active in Paris from ca. 1670 to 1704, wrote:
Medée knows Charpentier to be one of the finest French composers of all time. His music is grounded firmly in the 17th century, and Charpentier passed into obscurity shortly after his death. Ever since the late 19th century, revivals of Charpentier’s music have come by fits and starts.
In this context, Warren Stewart’s crack period-instrument consort Magnificat resurrected a set of Charpentier petit motets in Sunday afternoon’s concert at the beautifully restored St. Mark’s Lutheran Church, San Francisco. Given that Charpentier composed more than 400 motets (this just the motets), there is a wealth of music to be aired. Magnificat revived a set of motets from one manuscript collection for the feast days in the Epiphany season (the period in the church calendar between Christmas and the appearance of the Wise Men, established later at Jan. 6). Music scholar John Powell prepared the performing editions and provided detailed, if a bit inaccessible, program notes.
I am he who was born long ago and was widely known in this century, but now I am naked and nothing, dust in a tomb, at an end, and food for worms. … I was a musician, considered good by the good musicians, and ignorant by the ignorant ones. And since those who scorned me were more numerous than those who praised me, music brought me small honor and great burdens. And just as I at birth brought nothing into this world, thus when I died I took nothing away.Although most likely a work of satire (at the time, Charpentier was the master of music at the gothic chapel Sainte-Chapelle in Paris, the second-highest post in French religious music), Charpentier’s recognition paled, and pales, in comparison to his contemporaries Jean Baptiste Lully and Michel Richard de Lelande. Yet anyone who has heard his opera