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Complete. Complete Score PDF 1 MBJod. Manum suam misit hostis. Complete Score PDF 1 MBComplete. Complete Score PDF 2 MBComplete. Complete Score PDF 9 MBWikipediaThe Leçons de ténèbres pour le mercredi saint ("Tenebrae Readings for Holy Wednesday") are a series of three vocal pieces composed by
François Couperin for the liturgies of Holy Week, 1714, at the Abbaye royale de Longchamp.
Couperin's Leçons de ténèbres use the Latin text of the Old Testament Book of Lamentations, in which Jeremiah deplores the destruction of Jerusalem by the Babylonians.
Those by Couperin are for two high vocalists and basso continuo. They are composed of three lessons (two other sets of three for Thursday and Friday having been lost). Each Latin verse is preceded by a melisma on the first letter of the Hebrew text. The first two were composed for one single voice, while the third was written for two voices. This last Leçon, where the two voices perform superb appoggiatura, ornaments, dissonances and vocalizing, is considered as one of the undisputed peaks of baroque vocal music.
A 1954 recording of these works serves as the theme music for the 1968 film Phèdre, featuring Marie Bell. The recording, conducted by Laurence Boulay, was released on the French label Erato.