Louis Couperin

{ Louis Couperin (French: [lwi kupʁɛ̃]; c. 1626 – 29 August 1661) was a French Baroque composer and performer. He was born in Chaumes-en-Brie and moved to Paris in 1650–1651 with the help of Jacques Champion de Chambonnières. Couperin worked as organist of the Church of St. Gervais in Paris and as musician at the court. He quickly became one of the most prominent Parisian musicians, establishing himself as a harpsichordist, organist, and violist, but his career was cut short by his early death at the age of thirty-five. None of Couperin's music was published during his lifetime, but manuscript copies of some 200 pieces survive, some of them only rediscovered in the mid-20th century. The first historically important member of the Couperin family, Couperin made contributions to the development of both the French organ school and the French harpsichord school. His innovations included composing organ pieces for specific registrations and inventing the genre of the unmeasured prelude for harpsichord, for which he devised a special type of notation. {

"Baroque Classics": The Greatest Composers - 2025-10-11 00:00:00

"Baroque Masters" - 2025-10-02 00:00:00

Harpsichord Heaven - 2025-09-08 00:00:00

"Beethoven, Chopin & Couperin" - Pavel Kolesnikov - 2025-06-24 00:00:00

"A Baroque Masterpiece" - 2025-06-09 00:00:00

Similar Artists

Wieland Kuijken

Roberto Loreggian

Lorenzo Ghielmi

Johann Bernhard Bach

Vittorio Ghielmi

Antoine Forqueray

Jean-Baptiste Quentin

Johann Caspar Ferdinand Fischer

Johann Jakob Froberger

Jacques Duphly

Marcin Świątkiewicz

Carlos Seixas

Davitt Moroney

Olivier Baumont

François Fernandez

Jean-Henri d'Anglebert

Jean-François Dandrieu

Kaori Uemura

Hanneke van Proosdij

Jacques Champion de Chambonnières