Performance · Other credits
Jean-FrançOis Paillard
Jean-FrançOis Paillard is credited on 1,969 releases across 316 albums tracked on Gatefold, active 1955–2022 — the collector-built map of who actually made the music.
1,969
Pressings credited
316
Albums
8
Decades active
16
In collections
Biography
Jean-François Paillard (12 April 1928 – 15 April 2013) was a French conductor. He was born in Vitry-le-François and received his musical training at the Conservatoire de Paris, where he won first prize in music history, and the Salzburg Mozarteum. He also earned a degree in mathematics at the Sorbonne. In 1953, he founded the Jean-Marie Leclair Instrumental Ensemble, which in 1959 became the Orchestre de Chambre Jean-François Paillard. The ensemble has made recordings of much of the Baroque repertoire for Erato Records and has toured throughout Europe and the United States. It has also recorded with many leading French instrumentalists, including Maurice André, Jean-Pierre Rampal, Pierre Pierlot, Lily Laskine, Jacques Lancelot, Michel Arrignon. A 1968 recording by the orchestra of the "Canon and Gigue for 3 violins and basso continuo" by Johann Pachelbel, familiarly known as Pachelbel's Canon, nearly single-handedly brought the piece from obscurity to great renown. The recording was done in a more Romantic style, at a significantly slower tempo than it had been played at before, and contained obligato parts, written by Paillard, that are now closely associated with the piece. It was released on an Erato Records album, and was also included on a widely distributed album by mail-order label Musical Heritage Society album in 1968. The recording began to get significant attention in the United States, particularly in San Francisco, during the early 1970s. By the late 1970s various renditions of it were topping classical music charts in the U.S., including Paillard's own. The Paillard Chamber Orchestra's recording was also prominently featured in the soundtrack of the 1980 film Ordinary People. Paillard released 307 records. He also appeared frequently as a guest conductor with other orchestras and was active as an author. He edited the series Archives de la Musique Instrumentale and published La musique française classique in 1960. He died on 15 April 2013, three days a
Bio from Wikipedia
Credited work
1,969 releases · 316 albums · active 1955–2022
- Performance · 2,028
- Other credits · 621
- Production · 16
Studios: Notre-Dame du Liban · Église Notre-Dame Des Roses · Église Saint-Michel Des Batignolles, Paris · Sankta Maria Kyrka, Helsingborg
Discography
Records they worked on — most-collected first.

Le Canon De Pachelbel & Deux Suites Pour Cordes / Le Concerto Pour Trompette De Fasch & Deux Symphonies
1968

Integrale Des 16 Concertos Pour Orgue Et Orchestre No. 13-16 Vol. IV

Musique De Table = Tafelmusik = Banquet Music
1982

Concertos Pour Violoncelle
1982

The Pachelbel Canon And Other Baroque Favorites
1980

Water Music
1973

Suite No. 2 En Si Mineur / Concerto Pour Flute En Mi Mineur / Sinfonia De La Cantate 209
1972

Cinq Concertos
1971

Concerto Pour Flute & Harpe / Concerto Pour Clarinette
1964

Royal Firework's Music
1963

Water Music
1960

Maurice André Interprète Six Concertos Pour Trompette
Frequent collaborators
- Various
- Maurice André
- J.S. Bach
- Mozart
- Haendel
- W.A. Mozart
- Vivaldi
- J. S. Bach
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