Transcript CHAPTER 21
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 Francis (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 and Benvenuto Cellini into France
– The establishment of a college for the study of classical
literature in both Latin and ancient Greek
– The importation of Italian instrumentalists to play at his
court
– The recognition of the importance of new invention--music
printing--by granting a monopoly to printer Pierre
Attaingnant
King Francis I
as painted by Jean Clouet about 1525
MUSIC PRINTING IN PARIS
• During the 1520s Pierre Attaingnant (c1494c1532) developed a relatively inexpensive method
by which to print music called single-impression
printing.
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.
A French printing shop about the year 1530
On the right, proofreaders check the text
for errors.
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 animated the
rhythms of the music. This type of chanson of the
1520s, 1530s, and 1540s has come to be called the
Parisian chanson.
A tapestry from Bourges, France, depicting four
singers performing a chanson from part books
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, and appeared in many
different instrumental arrangements.
The beginning of Claudin de Sermisy’s Parisian
chanson Tant que vivray
first printed by Pierre Attaingnant in 1528
INSTRUMENTAL ARRANGEMENTS
• So popular was Claudin’s Tant que vivray that it
soon appeared in instrumental arrangements for
solo keyboard, lute, lute and voice, and even for
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 intablulation, in part
because it is written in lute tablature. Pierre
Attaingnant issued Tant que vivray in lute tablature
in 1529.
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, and notes of long duration are broken up into quickly
moving lines of figural ornamentation (here eighth notes).
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 soprano
voice takes the over the original soprano line of the song while the
lute plays a slightly ornamented arrangement of the bottom three
voices.
ARRANGEMENT FOR KEYBOARD
• In 1531 Attaingnant issued a collection of twentyone 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
the chordal skeleton of the original chanson.
The beginning of Pierre Attaingnant’s arrangement
of Tant que vivray for keyboard solo
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.
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 steps of the dance
came in units of four, and the lines of the music,
consequently, tended to span four-bar phrases.
The beginning of a four-part instrumental pavane
published by Pierre Attaingnant in Paris in 1547
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. The fast steps are periodically
embellished with leaps (sauts) into the air. The
principal leap (saut majeur) occurs on beat five of
the six-beat phrase, and this accounts for the
frequent use of hemiola.
The beginning of a four-part instrumental galliard
published by Pierre Attaingnant in Paris in 1547
Note the hemiola in bar 4.
A painting believed to
show queen Elizabeth I
dancing the volta, an
athletic dance closely
related to the galliard.
THOINOT ARBEAU: THE DANCING PRIEST
• Thoinot Arbeau was the pseudonym of Jehan
Tabourot (1520-1595), a priest who lived in
Langres, in the eastern part of France. Most of
what we know about dancing in Renaissance
France is contained in Arbeau’s Orchésographie
(1589), a manual of instruction presented in the
form of a dialogue between master and pupil.
A couple executing a “révérance” (initial bow) as
depicted in Thoinot Arbeau’s Orchésographie (1589)