File:Britannica Horn 32-ft C + 35 degrees.png

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Britannica_Horn_32-ft_C_+_35_degrees.png(152 × 70 pixels, file size: 2 KB, MIME type: image/png)

Description
English: Lulli composed the incidental music for a ballet, La Princesse d'Elide, which formed part of Molière's divertissement, “Les plaisirs de l'île enchantée,” written for a great festival at Versailles on the 7th of May 1664. It is among Philidor's copies of Lulli's ballets preserved in the library of the Paris Conservatoire of Music (vol. xlvii., p. 61). One number is “Air des valets de chiens et des chasseurs avec les cors de chasse,” set for five horns in B♭. Here the use of D, the fifth note of the harmonic series, indicates that the fundamental was a tone lower than the C horn and known as B♭ basso. Victor Mahillon (see “Le Cor,” pp. 23 and 24, and Dictionnaire de l'acad. des beaux arts, vol. iv., art. “Cor.”) considers that the music reveals the fact that it was written for horns in B♭, 35 degrees (chromatic semitones) above 32-ft. C, or the note shown in this image having a wave-length of 1.475 m. To this statement it is not possible for Kathleen Schlesinger to subscribe.
Date
Source Encyclopædia Britannica, 11th ed., Vol. 13, p. 703.
Author Kathleen Schlesinger
Permission
(Reusing this file)
Public domain This image comes from the 13th edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica or earlier. The copyrights for that book have expired in the United States because the book was first published in the US with the publication occurring before January 1, 1929. As such, this image is in the public domain in the United States.

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current17:08, 18 August 2009Thumbnail for version as of 17:08, 18 August 2009152 × 70 (2 KB)Bob Burkhardt{{Information |Description={{en|1=Lulli composed the incidental music for a ballet, ''La Princesse d'Elide'', which formed part of Molière's divertissement, “Les plaisirs de l'île enchantée,” written for a great festival at Versailles on the 7th of