Jean-Paul-Égide Martini
Jean-Paul-Égide Martini, also known as Jean-Paul-Gilles Martini was a French composer of German birth during the classical period. He is best known today for the vocal romance "Plaisir d'amour," on which the 1961 Elvis Presley pop standard "Can't Help Falling in Love" is based. He is often confused with the Italian composer Giovanni Battista Martini, so is sometimes known as Martini Il Tedesco.
Life and career
Martini was born Johann Paul Aegidius Martin in Freystadt, Bavaria, as the son of the schoolmaster Andreas Martin and his wife Barbara. He was educated at the Jesuit seminary in Neuburg an der Donau and later started a study of philosophy in Freiburg im Breisgau, which he quit unfinished. He temporarily adopted the code name "Schwarzendorf", presumably trying to cover his tracks for the fear of being urged to refund his education costs. He re-adopted his original family name in the Italianized form "Martini" after moving to France. There, he established a successful career as a court musician.In 1764, he married Marguerite Camelot. Having directed concerts for Queen Marie Antoinette, he adapted to the changing regimes throughout the French Revolution, and later wrote music for Napoleon's marriage as well as for the restored Chapelle royale. His melodic opera L'amoureux de quinze ans, written in 1771, enjoyed great success. In addition, his highly popular church music combined old forms with modern theatricality, and his chansons, including "Plaisir d'amour", were influential. In 1788, he paid 16.000 livres to become surintendant de la musique du roi. He was designated to take office after his predecessor's death; however, the outbreak of the French Revolution prevented this. Martini lost all his functions and took flight to Lyon.
In 1800, he became a professor of composition at the Paris Conservatoire. In 1814, after the Bourbon Restoration, Martini was finally appointed surintendant de la musique du roi, the post that he had been promised more than 25 years earlier. His last composition was a requiem in honour of Louis XVI, which he performed in the Basilica of St Denis on 21 January 1816, the anniversary day of the monarch's execution. Martini died in Paris in February 1816 at the age of 74.
Selected list of works
Annette and Lubin ;Sappho, with libretto by Constance de Pipelet de Leury ;L'amoureux de quinze ans, ou La double fête ;Henri IV ;Le Droit du Seigneur ;- "Plaisir d'amour", song ;
- "Prière pour le Roi", political song ;Scène héroïque pour Napoléon.