chapter 22 music in renaissance paris

21
CHAPTER 22 MUSIC IN RENAISSANCE PARIS

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Page 1: Chapter 22   music in renaissance paris

CHAPTER 22

MUSIC IN RENAISSANCE

PARIS

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Page 2: Chapter 22   music in renaissance paris

THE RENAISSANCE IN PARIS

• During the Black Death (1349-1350) and the Hundred Years’ War (1337-1453) the fortunes of France, and Paris in particular, declined.

• Paris regained its former glory during the reign of King Francis I (r. 1515-1547), who almost single-handedly brought the Italian Renaissance to France.

• Among the accomplishments of Francis I were:– The importation of Italian artists such as Leonardo da Vinci

into France.

– The establishment of a college for the study of classical literature in both Latin and ancient Greek (Collège de France).

– The importation of Italian instrumentalists to play at his court.

– The recognition of the importance of a new invention--music printing.

Page 3: Chapter 22   music in renaissance paris

King Francis I as painted by Jean Clouet about 1525

Page 4: Chapter 22   music in renaissance paris

MUSIC PRINTING IN PARIS

• During the 1520s Pierre Attaingnant (c1494-c1532) developed a relatively inexpensive method by which to print music – called single-impression printing.

Page 5: Chapter 22   music in renaissance paris

A copy of the soprano part of a Mass by Jean Mouton printed by Pierre Attaingnant

in 1532

The wavy lines are created by the many small pieces of movable type being fitted together.

Page 6: Chapter 22   music in renaissance paris

A French printing shop about the year 1530

On the right, proof-readers check the text for errors.

Page 7: Chapter 22   music in renaissance paris

THE PARISIAN CHANSON

• Beginning in 1528 Pierre Attaingnant issued nearly a hundred collections of popular polyphonic songs

- usually for four voice parts.

• Each voice was set in its own book called a part book.

• The chanson Attaingnant published usually had a light, lively style

- in which the rhythms of the text determined the rhythms of the music.

• This type of chanson of the 1520s, 1530s, and 1540s has come to be called the Parisian chanson.

Page 8: Chapter 22   music in renaissance paris

A tapestry from Bourges, France, depicting four singers performing a

chanson from part books

Page 9: Chapter 22   music in renaissance paris

CLAUDIN DE SERMISY

• Claudin de Sermisy (c1490-1562) was the master of the Parisian chanson.

• Although primarily a church musician, he still managed to publish 169 very worldly, secular chansons.

• The most popular of these was his four-voice Tant que vivray (As Long as I Live)– which possesses snappy musical rhythms inspired by

the accents of the poem.

• An alluring melody and bouncy rhythms explain why Tant que vivrary was reprinted in England, Italy, the Netherlands, and Spain– appeared in many different instrumental arrangements.

Page 10: Chapter 22   music in renaissance paris

The beginning of Claudin de Sermisy’s Parisian chanson Tant que vivray

first printed by Pierre Attaingnant in 1528

Page 11: Chapter 22   music in renaissance paris

INSTRUMENTAL ARRANGEMENTS

• So popular was Claudin’s Tant que vivray that it soon appeared in instrumental arrangements for - solo keyboard - lute - lute and voice - three lutes

• The four-voice version could also be played by a four-part instrumental ensemble.

• A version of a chanson, Mass, or motet arranged for solo lute is called a lute intabulation, in part because it is written in lute tablature.

• Pierre Attaingnant issued Tant que vivray in lute tablature in 1529.

Page 12: Chapter 22   music in renaissance paris

LUTE TABLATURE

• The beginning of Tant que vivray written in lute tablature (below) with a modern transcription (above).

• As often happens in lute transcriptions– the alto line of the original chanson has been removed

– notes of long duration are broken up into quickly moving

lines of figural ornamentation (here eighth notes).

Page 13: Chapter 22   music in renaissance paris

ARRANGEMENT FOR VOICE AND LUTE

• The beginning of Claudin’s Tant que vivray arranged for voice and lute as published by Pierre Attaingnant in 1529.

• Here the solo soprano voice takes the over the original soprano line of the song.

• The lute plays a slightly ornamented arrangement of the bottom three voices.

Page 14: Chapter 22   music in renaissance paris

ARRANGEMENT FOR KEYBOARD

• In 1531 Attaingnant issued a collection of twenty-one chansons arranged for keyboard solo– one of the first printed collections of keyboard

music.

• Here again the ever-popular Tant que vivray appeared now with more abundant ornamentation applied to chordal skeleton of the original chanson.

Page 15: Chapter 22   music in renaissance paris

The beginning of Pierre Attaingnant’s arrangement of Tant que vivray for keyboard

solo

Page 16: Chapter 22   music in renaissance paris

OTHER INSTRUMENTAL ARRANGEMENTS

A four-voice Parisian chanson might be performed by many different combinations of instrumentals. In this painting, showing Paris as it was about 1540, a flautist plays the upper voice of a chanson while a lutenist plays an intabulation of the lower voices.

Page 17: Chapter 22   music in renaissance paris

DANCE MUSIC

• In 1529 Pierre Attangnant commenced to publish dance music for four-part instrumental ensemble.

• The most numerous dances issued by Attaingnant were the pavane and the galliard.

• The pavane is a slow, gliding dance in duple meter performed by couples holding hands.

• The pavane gradually replaced the 15th century basse danse as the slow dance of the court.

• The steps of the dance came in units of four– the lines of the music, consequently, tended to

span four-bar phrases.

Page 18: Chapter 22   music in renaissance paris

The beginning of a four-part instrumental pavane published by Pierre Attaingnant in

Paris in 1547

Page 19: Chapter 22   music in renaissance paris

THE GALLIARD

• The pavane was usually followed by the galliard– a fast leaping dance in triple meter.

• The basic unit of this dance and its music involves six beats and six steps in 6/4 time.

Page 20: Chapter 22   music in renaissance paris

The beginning of a four-part instrumental galliard published by Pierre Attaingnant in

Paris in 1547

Note the hemiola in bar 4.

Page 21: Chapter 22   music in renaissance paris

A painting believed to show queen Elizabeth I dancing the volta, an athletic dance closely related to the galliard.