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Home  >  Early Music Vancouver Events  >  A French Baroque Christmas with Ensemble Correspondances

Friday, December 4, 2026 | 7:30 pmChan Centre for the Performing Arts

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A French Baroque Christmas with Ensemble Correspondances

“Messe de minuit pour Noël” by Marc-Antoine Charpentier

Artists: Ensemble Correspondances directed by Sébastien Daucé; with Caroline Weynants, Soprano; Lucile Richardot, Alto; Richard Pittsinger, Tenor; and Lysandre Châlon, Basse.

Pre-concert Chat: TBA

Runtime: approximately 80 minutes plus interval

Written for the holy night of Christmas, Charpentier’s Midnight Mass has travelled the world. Based on traditional French Noëls, this music offers pleasure to everyone: be it through the joy of hearing a familiar tune, or of marveling at its extraordinary craftsmanship. The very simplicity of the original songs lends the entire Mass a cheerful character and a transparency that is anything but shallow, speaking instead in a language that was once profoundly universal.

“…the path followed by Sébastien Daucé and Correspondances represents the culmination of a practice deeply nourished by the French repertoire, a familiarity reinforced by a true ensemble spirit that privileges the blending of timbres, mutual listening, and a harmonic culture that brings to the surface details otherwise buried: Italian reminiscences, verbal rhetoric, the rare grain of the continuo, and the absolute primacy of the text. 

– Jérémie Rousseau (Radio-France)

Generously sponsored by José Verstappen


PROGRAMME:

Marc-Antoine Charpentier (1643 – 1704)

Sub tuum praesidium H.28 

Quam gloriosa dicta sunt de te H.400 (extract) 

In nativitatem Domini canticum H.416

Interval

Marc-Antoine Charpentier

Nuit H.420 

Sébastien de Brossard (1655 – 1730)

O Miraculum 

Marc-Antoine Charpentier

Messe de minuit H.9 Kyrie

Messe de minuit H.9 Christe 

Messe de minuit H.9 Kyrie 

Joseph est bien marié H.534 

Messe de minuit H.9 Gloria 

O sacramentum pietatis H.274 

Messe de minuit H.9 Credo 

Or nous dites Marie H.534 

In Nativitate Domini Canticum H. 421 

Messe de minuit H.9 Sanctus 

Messe de minuit H.9 Agnus 


Caroline Weynants, Soprano

Caroline Weynants is a Belgian soprano specializing in Baroque music. She is distinguished by her extensive collaborations with high-quality international ensembles and by a rich discography. Trained at the Royal Conservatory of Liège (Belgium), where she obtained her advanced diploma in singing (2003) as well as a first prize in chamber music, she worked there on all repertoires, from early music to contemporary music.

In 1998, she joined the Chamber Choir of Namur (Centre d’Art Vocal & de Musique Ancienne – CAV&MA), where she built her career as a choral singer and soloist under the direction of renowned conductors such as M. Minkowski, S. Kuijken, J. Tubéry, J-C. Malgloire, G. Van Waas, F. Bernius, P. Dombrecht, P. Davin, Ph. Pierlot, and L. García Alarcón. She has performed with some of the best European Baroque ensembles: La Fenice (J. Tubéry), Les Agrémens (G. Van Waas), Il Fondamento (P. Dombrecht), Il Gardellino (M. Ponseele, Jan de Winne), Cappella Mediterranea (L. García Alarcón), Lauda Musica, La Grande Chapelle (A. Recasens), Les Muffatti, Correspondances (S. Daucé), and Vox Luminis (L. Meunier).

These collaborations have resulted in several recordings, including, for example, C.P.E. Bach: *Lukas Passion* with Il Fondamento, or Grétry: Céphale et Procris with Les Agrémens; Bach: Desire – Cantatas 32, 49 & 154 with Il Gardellino, as well as Falvetti: Il diluvio Universale or Nabucco with L. García Alarcón. Histoires Sacrées by Charpentier with Correspondances, Handel’s Dixit Dominus with Vox Luminis, and many others.

Caroline Weynants has sung at numerous festivals across Europe—the Ambronay Festival, the Beaune Baroque Opera Festival, the Centre de Musique Baroque de Versailles, the Bourg-en-Bresse Festival, Lyon, Lessay, Sablé, La Chaise-Dieu, and Périgueux. In Belgium, she has performed at the Flanders and Wallonia festivals; she has also appeared in festivals and major venues in Spain, Italy, Germany, England, Canada, and the United States.

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Lucile Richardot, Alto

Equally at home in madrigals as in solo repertoire, as well as being a committed Early Music champion, Lucile Richardot discovered singing as a child in her hometown of Épinal and initially pursued a career in journalism.
Having subsequently trained with the Maîtrise de Notre-Dame de Paris, then in Early Music at the Conservatoire à Rayonnement Régional in Paris, she embraces all eras and musical styles, on the concert platform as on the operatic stage. She has notably sung with Il Seminario Musicale, Le Poème Harmonique, Les Paladins, Solistes XXI, the Ensemble Intercontemporain, Collegium 1704, Het Collectief, Il Giardino Armonico, The English Concert, Le Concert de la Loge, Les Accents, Les Surprises, Faenza, the Orchestre National de France, and she performs regularly with Correspondances, Pygmalion, Les Arts Florissants, Pulcinella, Les Musiciens de Saint-Julien, and Acte 6...

Richard Pittsinger, Tenor

Praised by Anthony Tomassini of The New York Times for his “winning singing and youthful bearing,” American tenor Richard Pittsinger is quickly establishing himself as a leading performer of both early and modern repertoire.  An artist of rare versatility whose performance experience spans music across four centuries, Pittsinger’s principal operatic roles to date include Céphale in Élisabeth Jacquet de La Guerre’s Céphale et Procris with the Boston Early Music Festival, Aminta in Handel’s Atalanta with Juilliard Opera, Polinesso in Jonathan Dawe’s Being Ariodante at the Italian Academy, Orfeo in Luigi Rossi’s L’Orfeo with Juilliard Opera, Lysander in Britten’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream with Juilliard Opera, and “The Rocket” in Laura Karpman’s Wilde Tales at the Glimmerglass Festival. Additional stage credits include Verdi’s Falstaff at the Aspen Music Festival (Dr. Caius), Handel’s Acis & Galatea (Damon & Corydon), Virgil Thomson’s The Mother of Us All (Andrew Johnson), and Offenbach’s Orpheus in the Underworld (Mercury). Recent stage credits also include excerpts from the title role in Rameau’s Platée and the ensemble of Verdi’s Un giorno di regno at the Garsington Opera Festival, where he subsequently won the esteemed Helen Clark Award. In addition, at the 2023 International Baroque Singing Competition of Normandy, Richard was awarded both the Young Artist Award and Audience Award. Equally comfortable on the concert stage, Pittsinger has additionally served as tenor soloist with Musica Sacra, ARTEK, Central City Chorus, The Cecilia Chorus of New York, The Co-Cathedral at St. Joseph’s, as well as Julliard415. He has collaborated with, or appeared under the direction of, such musicians as Paul Agnew, Louisa Muller, Christopher Alden, Mary Birnbaum, Avi Stein, Gilbert Blin, William Christie, Richard Egarr, Stephen Stubbs, Patrick Summers, Stephen Wadsworth, and Gary Wedow.

Lysandre Châlon, Basse

Lysandre Châlon began his vocal training at the Conservatoire de Meaux before continuing his studies at the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique et de Danse de Paris.

Lysandre’s upcoming engagements in the 2025–2026 season include multiple collaborations with Les Talens Lyriques and a series of concert projects with Ensemble Correspondances. Highlights include the recording of Lully’s Cadmus et Hermione and a performance of Berlioz’s L’Enfance du Christ (as Joseph) at the Müpa concert hall in Budapest. The season will conclude with his house debut at the Opéra national du Rhin, where he will appear in the title role of a new production of Le nozze di Figaro.

Lysandre Châlon has performed with esteemed conductors and ensembles across a diverse repertoire. In baroque music, he has sung roles in Armide, Dido and Aeneas, and David et Jonathas, collaborating with Christophe Rousset, Leonardo García Alarcón, and Ensemble Correspondances. He has also appeared at the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées and regularly works under the baton of conductors such as Emmanuelle Haïm.

In the Mozart repertoire, he has performed Figaro, Papageno, Guglielmo, Leporello, and the Count in Le nozze di Figaro with companies including Opéra Éclaté. He has also appeared as Belcore in L’elisir d’amore, Franck in Die Fledermaus, and the Baker in Bernstein’s Wonderful Town.

As a concert soloist, Lysandre has interpreted major works such as Mozart’s Requiem, Rossini’s Petite Messe Solennelle, and Dvořák’s Stabat Mater and Requiem.

Lysandre completed a master’s degree at the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique et de Danse de Paris, where he studied with Frédéric Gindraux, Morgane Fauchois-Prado, and Mary Olivon. He has also participated in masterclasses with renowned artists such as Véronique Gens, Iñaki Encina Oyon, Irène Kudela, and Alain Buet.

A passionate interpreter of art song and lieder, he regularly performs works by Ropartz, Ibert, Fauré, Duparc, Schubert, Brahms, Wolf, Vaughan Williams, and Gerald Finzi, and has received guidance from Anne Le Bozec, Philippe Biros, Susan Manoff, and Jeff Cohen.

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Ensemble Correspondances

Founded in Lyon in 2009, Correspondances brings together under the direction of the harpsichordist and organist Sébastien Daucé a group of singers and instrumentalists, all of whom are specialists in the music of the Grand Siècle. In a few short years of existence, Correspondances has become a benchmark ensemble in the seventeenth-century French repertory. Placing itself under the auspices of Baudelaire’s notion of correspondences between the arts, it performs music whose sonorities can still directly touch today’s listeners while presenting staged productions of rarer and more original forms such as the oratorio and the ballet de cour.

The exceptional reconstruction of the score of Le Ballet Royal de la Nuit, the result of three years of research, allowed modern audiences to discover a major musical event of the seventeenth century, the unprecedented moment that inaugurated the reign of the Sun King. After the public and critical success of the CD-book released on harmonia mundi (Le Concert Royal de la Nuit, 2015), the ensemble returned to this extraordinary spectacle in 2017 with the théâtre de Caen, in a contemporary production by Francesca Lattuada combining elements of the circus and the dance, also given at the Opéra Royal de Versailles and at the Opéra de Dijon. This staged version has been published recently: an exceptional box set gathering the full music (27 additional dances) and the recording of the show.

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Sébastien Daucé , Director

Sébastien Daucé is a French conductor and musicologist, born in France on 4 June 1980. He is artistic director and founder of Ensemble Correspondances, formed from alumni of the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique de Lyon.

It was during his training at the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique de Lyon that he met the future members of Correspondances. Key influences among his teachers there were Françoise Lengellé and Yves Rechsteiner. Initially, in demand as a continuo player and vocal répétiteur (with the Pygmalion ensemble, the Festival d’Aix en Provence, and the Maîtrise and Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France among others), he formed the Correspondances ensemble in Lyon in 2009, assembling around him singers and instrumentalists with a passion for the French sacred repertory of the Grand Siècle.

With this ensemble, which he directs from the harpsichord or the organ, he now travels throughout France and around the world, and frequently broadcasts on radio. Sébastien Daucé and Correspondances are in residence at the Théâtre de Caen, where they developed their first staged projects (Trois Femmes directed by Vincent Huguet in 2016, Le Ballet Royal de la Nuit directed by Francesca Lattuada in November 2017), and are associate artists at the Centre Culturel de Rencontre d’Ambronay, at the Opéra and Chapelle of the Château de Versailles, and at La Chapelle de la Trinité with the support of the Ville de Lyon.

Significant stages in the ensemble’s career have been tours to Japan, Colombia, the United States and China, alongside regular appearances in Europe (the United Kingdom, Germany, Benelux, Italy, Poland). Its exploration of a little-performed and often unpublished repertory has led, with the support of the harmonia mundi label, a pioneer of the Baroque repertory in many respects, to a discography of eleven recordings that have attracted considerable press attention and have received such distinctions as the Diapason d’Or of the Year, ffff de Télérama, Editor’s Choice in Gramophone, ‘Choc’ of the Year in Classica, German Record Critics’ Award and IRR Outstanding.

Correspondances now enjoys international recognition: at the ECHO Preis ceremony in the Berlin Konzerthaus in 2016, it won the award categories of Best World Premiere Recording (for Le Concert Royal de la Nuit) and Best Young Conductor of the Year, while the Australian Limelight magazine named it Operatic Recording of 2016 for Le Concert Royal de la Nuit.

Alongside his activities as a performing musician, Sébastien Daucé works with the leading scholars of seventeenth-century music, publishing regular articles and taking part in important performance practice projects. Passionately interested in questions of musical style, he edits the music that makes up the ensemble’s repertory, going so far as to recompose complete pieces when necessary, as was the case in Le Ballet Royal de la Nuit. He has taught at the Pôle Supérieur de Paris since 2012. In 2018 he is guest artistic director of the London Festival of Baroque Music. Sébastien Daucé is also an associate artist of the Fondation Royaumont.

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Een Romantische Johannes Passion

Historical Performance has been steadily looking toward the nineteenth-century as a source of inspiration, and Orchestra Lagrandt wants to lead the charge into Romantic orchestral performance practice. As an orchestra of ambitious musicians in their twenties from 25 different nations, we aspire to represent the voice of the new generation in Historical Performance.

Een Romantische Johannes Passion is an ongoing project to reimagine the Johannes Passion of J. S. Bach in a late nineteenth century style. The first Passion revivals in the Netherlands took place in Rotterdam in 1870, featuring large symphonic orchestrations, and a radically different musical language than that of the HP and modern classical worlds. In our initial performance with the Tangram Chamber Choir, we pushed the boundaries of what Romantic Bach might have sounded like: exploring changes in orchestration, stoic tempi, rubato, phrasing, nineteenth- century bowing practices, and even portamento. We plan to establish this project as an annual tradition every Easter season, reworking the arrangement each time in the spirit of Romantic spontaneity.


One of the wonderful things about the Historical Performance movement is that we are able to use forgotten practices, this time hailing from the nineteenth century, to present such a beloved and well known-work in a new light.

The world is familiar with stories of clever forgers whose life’s mission is to cunningly reproduce the light and shadows of historical masterworks, from Vermeer’s brushstrokes to Da Vinci’s proportional precision… but what if these crimes of craftsmanship were to extend beyond the visual arts? What if the pieces we know to be by Palestrina, Monteverdi or even Johann Sebastian Bach were in fact stylistic copies, artfully composed by a secret circle of music forgers and passed off as the work of the greats? What if those music forgers are at work as we speak? 

This premise inspires our original program The Music Forgery Workshop. Our early music comedy imagines the lives of such a circle of musical criminals, offering a fresh and lively presentation of historical compositions, not as museum artifacts but as living works in progress. The workshop itself is set up on the stage and its members carry forth the plot in music and words. A narrator in the role of a suspicious inspector lends the performance a theatrical flow. The listener is invited into a satire on high society’s art commerce, while the performers make fun of themselves for having devoted their lives to the niche subject of historical music performance. 

Violinist Elizabeth Sommers combines her skills and experience in traditional music with expertise in the performance and improvisation of medieval and Renaissance repertoires. Multi-instrumentalist Eliot X. Dios (keyboards, bagpipes and flutes) works wholeheartedly to employ storytelling techniques developed through the history of literature and cinema in his early music concerts. Composer Gunnar Haraldsson (violin, guitar) seeks to translate the forms and intentions of early composition for a modern audience. Halldór B. Arnarson (keyboards, voice) has devoted his career to bringing musical craftsmanship from the era of counterpoint to the attention of the public and comedy to the early music scene. Singer and storyteller Ásta S. Arnardóttir brings the storyline to the public with personal immediacy, and through her character work defines the different veins of the show, sometimes hilarious and sometimes serious. 

The story is narrated by the character of the Inspector, acted out by the members of the MFW, and told in rhyming Icelandic verse in one musical pillar of the show, a madrigal composed by our very own 

Halldór in the style of Monteverdi. The show has an entertaining educational dimension. The audience is exposed to a broad sweep of historical and musical information in a condensed form, necessary to understand the musical humour, while dramatic rhythm and scenographic effects prevent overwhelm. We also place particular emphasis on theatrical illusion and synchronisation. One example appears in the opening scene, in which the inspector is seen watching television. On stage, this becomes a complex exercise in coordination: each time the inspector presses a button on the remote control, the musicians instantly switch pieces, creating the impression of rapidly changing television channels. 

This opening scene establishes the tone of the entire show, comical and satirical in its storytelling and diverse in its musical language. It not only introduces the wide range of musical styles that appear throughout the performance, but also functions as the plot’s inciting incident, as the inspector hears a news report about the discovery of a previously unknown concerto by Vivaldi. 

Another important scene takes place when one forger is alone on stage in low light, perusing books on medieval music, while the musicians perform and sing offstage, sounding his audiation as he reads. This intimate moment evokes the sleepless nights spent studying facsimiles and learning historical compositional techniques, by which the forger acquires the inspiration and the expertise necessary to his art, and reveals a hidden side of musical performance: the immense amount of study and preparation that precedes the moment on stage. This setting also creates space for visual and musical comedy, as seen in the trailer video, where a 14th-century melody is played backwards because Halldór is unknowingly reading the facsimile upside-down, only realising the mistake when the music begins to sound absurd. 

Fun and friendship are at the heart of the whole project, though the link between music and crime is an important historical consideration. Classical music was often used as the demonstration of a monarch’s power, music teaching as a cover up for secret affairs, and pieces were published under another’s name for profit. Such examples of “inappropriate practices” carry an exciting and attractive element for the audience which the MFW seeks to exploit. Under this light-hearted surface lies a more serious layer of questions concerning our present-day existence, such as excessive materialism in high society and the threat posed on human craftsmanship and skill by the rise of artificial intelligence. 

Please Note:

The main applicant and creative/intellectual driver of the project must be 30 or under (on May 15th).

The average age of all musicians must not be older than 32, and the maximum age of supporting musicians must be no more than 35 (on May 15th.)