Artist's albums
Jenkins, J.: Fantasias
2001 · album
Schenck: Nymphs of the Rhine, Vol. 2
2001 · album
Amour cruel: Music for 2 Equal Viols
2001 · album
O Sweet Love: Music of Byrd & Dowland
2001 · album
Schenck: Nymphs of the Rhine, Vol. 1
2001 · album
Anguille sous roche
2023 · album
Le Monde de Sainte-Colombe
2019 · album
Dowland: Lachrimae
2018 · album
Kühnel: Sei sonate ò partite
2015 · album
Bach: The Art of Fugue
2013 · album
Humori
2009 · album
Marais: Pieces for 3 Violes
2006 · album
Corrette: Les Délices de la solitude
2006 · album
Muse
2005 · album
Pierre Bouteiller: de Vanitate Mundi
2005 · album
Primavera
2004 · album
Telemann: Works for Flute and Viola Da Gamba
2004 · album
Ay Que Sí! Music in 17th Century Spain
2002 · album
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Biography
The Canadian group Les Voix Humaines in its basic form consists of two viola da gamba players, Susie Napper and Margaret Little. The duo has expanded at times to a larger group, Les Voix Humaines Ensemble; both formations have specialized in music of the French Baroque. Napper and Little joined forces in Montreal in 1985 to form Les Voix Humaines. The name is taken from that of a work by composer Marin Marais, whose music is often heard in concerts by the duo. The two musicians have also been active in other Canadian early music groups, including Le Studio de Musique Ancienne de Montréal and Les Boréades de Montréal on Napper's part, and Rebel, Four Nations, and Trinity Consort on Little's. The duo quickly gained popularity, touring in Europe, the U.S., Australia, and Israel in addition to Canada, and their popularity was only boosted by the appearance of the 1991 film Tous les matins du monde: the film dealt with the life of Marais' teacher, Jean de Sainte-Colombe, whose music fell squarely within the duo's repertory. Les Voix Humaines has performed with a variety of guest vocalists and instrumentalists in concert, including soprano Suzie LeBlanc, countertenor Daniel Taylor, and theorbist Sylvain Bergeron. The duo has also expanded to the larger Les Voix Humaines Ensemble, enabling them to perform viol consort music by the likes of Purcell and Dowland; its repertory also extends forward to Bach and other composers of the High Baroque. Les Voix Humaines has accumulated a large catalog of recordings, beginning with Le Constant et l'infidèle in 1995 on ATMA Classique. Many of their recordings have been made for that Canadian label, including 2019's Le Monde de Sainte-Colombe; that album consisted of selections from the complete set of Sainte-Colombe's duos that Les Voix Humaines recorded in the middle of the 2000s decade. Napper has taught at McGill University, and Little at the University of Montreal.