The Complete Works of Gilles Mureau (c1442-1512) – poet-musician of Chartres: Introduced and edited by Peter Woetmann Christoffersen

Publikation: AndetUdgivelser på nettet - Net-publikationForskning

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The Complete Works of Gilles Mureau (c1442-1512) – poet-musician of Chartres : Introduced and edited by Peter Woetmann Christoffersen. / Christoffersen, Peter Woetmann.

2011, linked html-pages + complete PDF.

Publikation: AndetUdgivelser på nettet - Net-publikationForskning

Harvard

Christoffersen, PW 2011, The Complete Works of Gilles Mureau (c1442-1512) – poet-musician of Chartres: Introduced and edited by Peter Woetmann Christoffersen.. <http://www.pwch.dk/Publications/PWCH_Mureau.pdf>

APA

Christoffersen, P. W. (2011, sep. 8). The Complete Works of Gilles Mureau (c1442-1512) – poet-musician of Chartres: Introduced and edited by Peter Woetmann Christoffersen. http://www.pwch.dk/Publications/PWCH_Mureau.pdf

Vancouver

Christoffersen PW. The Complete Works of Gilles Mureau (c1442-1512) – poet-musician of Chartres: Introduced and edited by Peter Woetmann Christoffersen. 2011.

Author

Christoffersen, Peter Woetmann. / The Complete Works of Gilles Mureau (c1442-1512) – poet-musician of Chartres : Introduced and edited by Peter Woetmann Christoffersen. 2011.

Bibtex

@misc{1a1bebb0449242e3b245aabe14352b0a,
title = "The Complete Works of Gilles Mureau (c1442-1512) – poet-musician of Chartres: Introduced and edited by Peter Woetmann Christoffersen",
abstract = "Four secular songs – that is all the composer Gilles Mureau is known for today. Among the four was a song that became an international hit, “Je ne fais plus, je ne dis ne escris”, while the remaining three did not enjoy a comparable circulation – even if they were known in Florence during the 1480s and 1490s. Copyists began to ascribe the {\textquoteleft}hit song{\textquoteright} to the far more famous musicians Busnoys and Compere, and it was provided with an extra “Si placet” altus part in Ottaviano Petrucci{\textquoteright}s pioneering printed collection of secular music from 1501, the Odhecaton. Long before that, Mureau{\textquoteright}s name as a composer apparently started to sink into oblivion outside Central France, and it looks as if he for the greater part of his career concentrated on other things, and that the songs may belong to his youth.This introduction aims to discuss what we know about his life and work, and to review his few preserved songs on this background. His stature as a composer might turn out to be more important than one would expect from the treatment as third-rank composer he usually receives in the musicological literature. Mureau{\textquoteright}s literary ambitions and his way of transforming his poetic texts into music may have had some influence on the younger generation of chanson composers. At the end comes a short discussion of the difficulties of ascribing anonymous chansons along with an investigation into some candidates for inclusion into the works of Mureau.Introduction + editions, 56 pages",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, Gilles Mureau, Gilles Mureau",
author = "Christoffersen, {Peter Woetmann}",
year = "2011",
month = sep,
day = "8",
language = "English",
type = "Other",

}

RIS

TY - ICOMM

T1 - The Complete Works of Gilles Mureau (c1442-1512) – poet-musician of Chartres

T2 - Introduced and edited by Peter Woetmann Christoffersen

AU - Christoffersen, Peter Woetmann

PY - 2011/9/8

Y1 - 2011/9/8

N2 - Four secular songs – that is all the composer Gilles Mureau is known for today. Among the four was a song that became an international hit, “Je ne fais plus, je ne dis ne escris”, while the remaining three did not enjoy a comparable circulation – even if they were known in Florence during the 1480s and 1490s. Copyists began to ascribe the ‘hit song’ to the far more famous musicians Busnoys and Compere, and it was provided with an extra “Si placet” altus part in Ottaviano Petrucci’s pioneering printed collection of secular music from 1501, the Odhecaton. Long before that, Mureau’s name as a composer apparently started to sink into oblivion outside Central France, and it looks as if he for the greater part of his career concentrated on other things, and that the songs may belong to his youth.This introduction aims to discuss what we know about his life and work, and to review his few preserved songs on this background. His stature as a composer might turn out to be more important than one would expect from the treatment as third-rank composer he usually receives in the musicological literature. Mureau’s literary ambitions and his way of transforming his poetic texts into music may have had some influence on the younger generation of chanson composers. At the end comes a short discussion of the difficulties of ascribing anonymous chansons along with an investigation into some candidates for inclusion into the works of Mureau.Introduction + editions, 56 pages

AB - Four secular songs – that is all the composer Gilles Mureau is known for today. Among the four was a song that became an international hit, “Je ne fais plus, je ne dis ne escris”, while the remaining three did not enjoy a comparable circulation – even if they were known in Florence during the 1480s and 1490s. Copyists began to ascribe the ‘hit song’ to the far more famous musicians Busnoys and Compere, and it was provided with an extra “Si placet” altus part in Ottaviano Petrucci’s pioneering printed collection of secular music from 1501, the Odhecaton. Long before that, Mureau’s name as a composer apparently started to sink into oblivion outside Central France, and it looks as if he for the greater part of his career concentrated on other things, and that the songs may belong to his youth.This introduction aims to discuss what we know about his life and work, and to review his few preserved songs on this background. His stature as a composer might turn out to be more important than one would expect from the treatment as third-rank composer he usually receives in the musicological literature. Mureau’s literary ambitions and his way of transforming his poetic texts into music may have had some influence on the younger generation of chanson composers. At the end comes a short discussion of the difficulties of ascribing anonymous chansons along with an investigation into some candidates for inclusion into the works of Mureau.Introduction + editions, 56 pages

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - Gilles Mureau

KW - Gilles Mureau

M3 - Net publication - Internet publication

ER -

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