Transcript CHAPTER 13
CHAPTER 18
MUSIC AT THE FRENCH ROYAL COURT
• During the Hundred Years’ War the fortunes of the
French suffered a serious reversal--the English
eventually captured the French capital, Paris. The
medieval wheel of fortune began to turn positively
for the French, however, when Joan of Arc
(c1412-1431) led new king, Charles VII, to the city
of Reims and had him crowned there on 16 July
1429. Although the winds of war were now
blowing favorably, three generations of French
kings preferred to reside not in Paris, but in the
Loire Valley some 200 miles to the south. The
French royal chapel of each of these kings was
directed by Johannes Ockeghem (c1410-1497), a
composer of renown who enjoyed unusual
longevity and influence.
The French royal chapel
With Johannes Ockeghem
(presumably) at the far
right, wearing glasses.
The singers are chanting a
Gloria from a large music
book placed on a lectern.
JOHANNES OCKEGHEM
• Johannes Ockeghem was born in the Burgundian
lands south of Brussels, but by 1451 had joined the
French royal chapel in the Loire Valley, where he
remained until his death in 1497. Surviving from
Ockeghem’s pen are twenty-five chansons, six
motets, and fifteen Masses. In his chansons
Ockeghem demonstrates the first systematic
attempt to structure compositions by using
imitation (one voice duplicates the notes and
rhythms of another for a brief span of time).
CANONIC CHANSON PRENEZ SUR MOI
Ockeghem’s Prenez sur moi (c1460)is one of the earliest fully canonic
chansons (there is no non-canonic supporting bass). The follower
voices enter not at the unison or octave, but at the fourth.
The beginning of the canonic chanson Prenez sur moi (Take from me).
OCKEGHEM’S MISSA PROLATIONUM
• Ockeghem was a master of musical artifice, posing
and solving difficult technical problems in music.
His Missa Prolationum (c1475) involves two
separate mensuration canons worked out among
the four voices. A mensuration canon is one in
which two voices perform the same music at
different rates of speed, one pulling farther and
farther ahead of the other.
The beginning of the Kyrie of Ockeghem’s Missa Prolationum with the
top two voices operating in 2/4 and ¾ time, and the bottom two in
6/8 and 9/8 time.
A MUSICAL JOKE FOR THE FRENCH KING
• The music theorist Heinrich Glarean tells the story
of how the king of France, most likely King Louis
XI, asked a singer of the court, apparently Josquin
des Prez, to compose a piece in which he, too,
could participate. The canonic chanson that
Josquin created for this purpose is a musical joke in
that, while the upper two voices work out a canon,
the vox regis (voice of the king) holds the single
pitch D. Moreover, to assure that the monotonic
monarch didn’t stray in pitch, Josquin had the bass
voice sound the same pitch (an octave lower) on
every other of its notes.
The beginning of Josquin’s chanson Guillaume se va
chauffer (William is going to warm himself; c1482)
PHILIPPE BASIRON AND THE
PARAPHRASE MOTET
• In paraphrase technique a composer takes a
pre-existing plainsong (Gregorian chant) and
embellishes it somewhat, imparting to it a rhythmic
profile; the elaborated chant then serves as the
basic melodic material for a polyphonic
composition. Paraphrase technique applied to a
Mass creates a paraphrase Mass, and similarly
when applied to a motet creates a paraphrase
motet. A fine example of a paraphrase motet can
be seen in the Salve, Regina (c1475) of Philippe
Basiron (c1449-1491), a singer at the king’s SainteChapelle in the central French town of Bourges.
The beginning of Philippe Basiron’s Salve, Regina as well as the chant,
which serves as the basis of the paraphrase.
ANTOINE BUSNOYS AND
THE IMITATIVE CHANSON
• Antoine Busnoys (c1435-1492) was born in the
Burgundian lands of northern France, but as a
youth moved south to the Loire Valley to the city of
Tours, the abode of the king of France and his
chapel master Johannes Ockeghem. Like his
mentor Ockeghem, Busnoys was a master of the
imitative chanson. Not only does his virelai Je ne
puis vivre ainsy tousjours (I cannot live like this
forever; c1460) incorporate abundant imitation at
the unison, it sets a virelai text that includes an
acrostic that forms the name Jacqueline de
Hacqueville—perhaps the author of the poem or a
paramour of the composer.
A garden of love wherein two gentlemen
and two ladies perform a chanson
Both ladies are singing from a rotulus (sheet music).