Beautiful piece of music by Sainte-Colombe. J.S. Bach wrote something very similar to this for cello some twenty years after Sainte-Colombe's death,
This suggests that Sainte-Colombe was the original genius behind J.S. Bach's music. There is another French genius artist who I am quite sure was a mystic as well, and he is the original source of the renaissance art movement. His name was
Jean Fouquet. We have discussed him here before.
I use to play an arrangement of this for classical guitar, and I liked to play it in an old empty church. It was one of my favourites. I got out the music and played some of it through this morning.
I would like to hear you play the piece some day.
See opening prelude here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9i6pjvrkUZU
Thank-you for the link. I listened to the whole thing. Very nice.
Thank-you for the link to the film, will watch latter. I'm fortunate that I speak French. I very much enjoy watching films like this. The link to the scene you liked is dead.
Sorry about the dead link, but that is the internet for you. My French is clumsy, but I understand enough to enjoy the movie, but then I have seen it in English more times than I can count.
The places in the movie where Sainte-Colombe appears to be a genuine mystic are:
1) His idea of the music of the silence.
2) At some point in the movie he is sitting in the sun with Marin Marais and his daughter, and Sainte-Colombe says, "Oh the passion." And, Marin Marais and his daughter say, "Passion?"
3) He retreats from the world into his music
4) He gives away everything to maintain his solitude.
The problem with the story of Sainte-Colombe is most of what we know about Sainte-Colombe is most probably from someone else' point of view, who was most probably not a mystic, then the screen writer and director want to sell the film, so they twist the story more. So, I personally cannot imagine a genuine mystic being hung up on his dead wife for decades; however, I can see how grief over the death of his wife might have propelled him into an interior life, where he found bliss, joy and ecstasy.