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Ut musica poesis: Music and Poetry in France in the Late Sixteenth Century

Identifieur interne : 000159 ( Istex/Corpus ); précédent : 000158; suivant : 000160

Ut musica poesis: Music and Poetry in France in the Late Sixteenth Century

Auteurs : Howard Mayer Brown

Source :

RBID : ISTEX:260AB81996F6220CB154BA78F4E0170D7F2F56F8

Abstract

By praising rulers, whose magnificence formed a crucial part of the world order, Pierre de Ronsard and his French colleagues in the second half of the sixteenth century often depicted the world not as it was but as it ought to be. This idea informs Margaret McGowan's book on ideal forms in the age of Ronsard, in which she explores the ways poets and painters extolled the virtues and the theatrical magnificence of perfect princes following the Horatian dictum ut pictura poesis: as is painting so is poetry. McGowan demonstrates the virtuosity of the painters and poets of the sixteenth century in shaping their hymns of praise from the subject matter and ideals of ancient Greece and Rome by following Horace's advice to regard paintings as mute poems and poems as speaking pictures. McGowan shows how artists and intellectuals pursued their goals by creating four kinds of ideal form: iconic forms, sacred images derived from classical literary sources offering princes some guarantee of immortality; triumphal forms that evoke the heroic imperial past; ideal forms of beauty to be found in contemplating the beloved; and dancing forms that mirror rituals of celebration. McGowan claims that such ideal forms were intended to enlighten the ruler himself as much as they celebrated his grandeur in the eyes of others.

Url:
DOI: 10.1017/S0261127900001297

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ISTEX:260AB81996F6220CB154BA78F4E0170D7F2F56F8

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<p>By praising rulers, whose magnificence formed a crucial part of the world order, Pierre de Ronsard and his French colleagues in the second half of the sixteenth century often depicted the world not as it was but as it ought to be. This idea informs Margaret McGowan's book on ideal forms in the age of Ronsard, in which she explores the ways poets and painters extolled the virtues and the theatrical magnificence of perfect princes following the Horatian dictum
<italic>ut pictura poesis</italic>
: as is painting so is poetry. McGowan demonstrates the virtuosity of the painters and poets of the sixteenth century in shaping their hymns of praise from the subject matter and ideals of ancient Greece and Rome by following Horace's advice to regard paintings as mute poems and poems as speaking pictures. McGowan shows how artists and intellectuals pursued their goals by creating four kinds of ideal form: iconic forms, sacred images derived from classical literary sources offering princes some guarantee of immortality; triumphal forms that evoke the heroic imperial past; ideal forms of beauty to be found in contemplating the beloved; and dancing forms that mirror rituals of celebration. McGowan claims that such ideal forms were intended to enlighten the ruler himself as much as they celebrated his grandeur in the eyes of others.</p>
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<fn-group>
<fn id="fn01" symbol="1">
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<sup>1</sup>
</label>
<p>
<citation id="ref001" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>McGowan</surname>
<given-names>M. M.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Ideal Forms in the Age of Ronsard</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Berkeley and Los Angeles</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1985</year>
)</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn02" symbol="2">
<label>
<sup>2</sup>
</label>
<p>
<citation id="ref002" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>McGowan</surname>
</name>
,
<italic>Ideal Forms</italic>
, chap. 1: ‘The Perfect Prince’, pp.
<fpage>9</fpage>
<lpage>50</lpage>
</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn03" symbol="3">
<label>
<sup>3</sup>
</label>
<p>
<citation id="ref003" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Lee</surname>
<given-names>R. W.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Ut pictura poesis: the Humanistic Theory of Painting</source>
(
<publisher-loc>New York</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1967</year>
)</citation>
;
<citation id="ref004" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Gombrich</surname>
<given-names>E. H.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>symbolic Images: Studies in the Art of the Renaissance</source>
(
<publisher-loc>London</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1972</year>
)</citation>
;
<citation id="ref005" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Spencer</surname>
<given-names>J. R.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘
<article-title>Ut rhetorica pictura: a Study in Quattrocento Theory of Painting</article-title>
’,
<source>Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes</source>
,
<volume>20</volume>
(
<year>1957</year>
), pp.
<fpage>26</fpage>
<lpage>44</lpage>
</citation>
; and
<citation id="ref006" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Praz</surname>
<given-names>M.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Mnemosyne: the Parallel Between Literature and the Visual Arts</source>
(
<publisher-loc>New York</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1970</year>
)</citation>
. For a study of the relationship between rhetoric and music in late sixteenth-century Italian music, see
<citation id="ref007" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Palisca</surname>
<given-names>C. V.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘Ut oratoria musica: the Rhetorical Basis of Musical Mannerism’,
<source>The Meaning of Mannerism</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Robinson</surname>
<given-names>F. W.</given-names>
</name>
and
<name>
<surname>Nichols</surname>
<given-names>S. G.</given-names>
</name>
(
<publisher-loc>Hannover, NH</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1972</year>
), pp.
<fpage>37</fpage>
<lpage>65</lpage>
</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn04" symbol="4">
<label>
<sup>4</sup>
</label>
<p>Quoted from
<citation id="ref008" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>McGowan</surname>
</name>
,
<italic>Ideal Forms</italic>
, p.
<fpage>51</fpage>
</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn05" symbol="5">
<label>
<sup>5</sup>
</label>
<p>
<citation id="ref009" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>de Tyard</surname>
<given-names>P.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Solitaire second</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Yandell</surname>
<given-names>C. M.</given-names>
</name>
(
<publisher-loc>Geneva</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1980</year>
), p.
<fpage>71</fpage>
</citation>
. On Tyard and music, see
<citation id="ref010" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>McClelland</surname>
<given-names>J.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘Le mariage de Poésie et de Musique: un projet de Pontus de Tyard’,
<source>La chanson à la Renaissance</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Vaccaro</surname>
<given-names>J.-M.</given-names>
</name>
(
<publisher-loc>Tours</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1981</year>
), pp.
<fpage>80</fpage>
<lpage>92</lpage>
</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn06" symbol="6">
<label>
<sup>6</sup>
</label>
<p>
<citation id="ref011" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>McGowan</surname>
</name>
,
<italic>Ideal Forms</italic>
, p.
<fpage>230</fpage>
</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn07" symbol="7">
<label>
<sup>7</sup>
</label>
<p>For an approach to the expressive content of French music through the writings of theorists, see
<citation id="ref012" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>Walker</surname>
<given-names>D. P.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘La valeur expressive des intervalles mélodiques et harmoniques d'après les théoriciens et le problème de la quarte’,
<italic>La chanson à la Renaissance</italic>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Vaccaro</surname>
</name>
, pp.
<fpage>93</fpage>
<lpage>105</lpage>
</citation>
. On the practical nature of French treatises, see
<citation id="ref013" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Seay</surname>
<given-names>A.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘
<article-title>Jean Yssandon and French Renaissance Theory</article-title>
’,
<source>Journal of Music Theory</source>
,
<volume>15</volume>
(
<year>1971</year>
), pp.
<fpage>254</fpage>
–72</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn08" symbol="8">
<label>
<sup>8</sup>
</label>
<p>
<citation id="ref014" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>Tyard</surname>
</name>
,
<italic>Solitaire second</italic>
, p.
<fpage>71</fpage>
</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn09" symbol="9">
<label>
<sup>9</sup>
</label>
<p>‘the science which with sense and reason considers the difference between low and high sounds, or between soft and loud, providing the means of singing well harmoniously. … For this it is necessary to know clearly about species of harmony, and then to practise assiduously to intone and express the notes fluently in every mutation, with a carefully regulated measure, so that its proper subject is a melody that harmoniously encompasses words which are well-spoken, measured with some graceful rhythmic cadence, or balanced in an unequal equality of long or short pronunciation of syllables’;
<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref014">ibid.</xref>
, p. 79. The translation is taken from
<citation id="ref015" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Dobbins</surname>
<given-names>F.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Music in Renaissance Lyons</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Oxford</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1992</year>
), p.
<fpage>97</fpage>
</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn10" symbol="10">
<label>
<sup>10</sup>
</label>
<p>
<citation id="ref016" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>Tyard</surname>
</name>
,
<italic>Solitaire second</italic>
, p.
<fpage>214</fpage>
</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn11" symbol="11">
<label>
<sup>11</sup>
</label>
<p>
<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref016">Ibid.</xref>
, pp. 243–5.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn12" symbol="12">
<label>
<sup>12</sup>
</label>
<p>See
<citation id="ref017" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>du Bellay</surname>
<given-names>J.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>La deffence et illustration de la langue francoyse</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Chamard</surname>
<given-names>H.</given-names>
</name>
(
<publisher-loc>Paris</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1948</year>
; repr. 1970)</citation>
. On Baïf and his
<italic>vers et musique mesurés à l'antique</italic>
, see note 41 below.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn13" symbol="13">
<label>
<sup>13</sup>
</label>
<p>
<citation id="ref018" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>de Tyard</surname>
<given-names>P.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Le solitaire premier</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Baridon</surname>
<given-names>S. F.</given-names>
</name>
(
<publisher-loc>Lille and Geneva</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1950</year>
), p.
<fpage>74</fpage>
</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn14" symbol="14">
<label>
<sup>14</sup>
</label>
<p>Ronsard's preface is reproduced in, among other places,
<citation id="ref019" citation-type="book">
<source>La fleur des musiciens de P. de Ronsard</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Expert</surname>
<given-names>H.</given-names>
</name>
(
<publisher-loc>Paris</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1923</year>
; repr. New York, 1965), pp.
<fpage>vii</fpage>
<lpage>x</lpage>
</citation>
, and in
<citation id="ref020" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Ronsard</surname>
</name>
,
<source>Oeuvres complètes</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Cohen</surname>
<given-names>G.</given-names>
</name>
(
<publisher-loc>Paris</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1938</year>
),
<volume>ii</volume>
, pp.
<fpage>979</fpage>
–82</citation>
. Facsimiles of the prefaces for both the 1560
<italic>Mellange</italic>
and its reprint in 1572, and an English translation of the 1572 version, appear in
<citation id="ref021" citation-type="book">
<source>Le Roy & Ballard's 1572 Mellange de Chansons</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Jacobs</surname>
<given-names>C.</given-names>
</name>
(
<publisher-loc>University Park, PA, and London</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1982</year>
), pp.
<fpage>12</fpage>
<lpage>14</lpage>
and
<fpage>25</fpage>
–8</citation>
. Ronsard's
<italic>Abbregé de l'art poëtique françois</italic>
is published in a modern edition in, among other places,
<citation id="ref022" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Ronsard</surname>
</name>
,
<source>Oeuvres</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Cohen</surname>
</name>
,
<volume>ii</volume>
, pp.
<fpage>997</fpage>
<lpage>1011</lpage>
</citation>
, and in
<citation id="ref023" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Ronsard</surname>
</name>
,
<source>Oeuvres complètes</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Laumonier</surname>
<given-names>P.</given-names>
</name>
, rev. and completed by I. Silver and R. Lebègue, 20 vols. (
<publisher-loc>Paris</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1914</year>
<year>1975</year>
),
<volume>xiv</volume>
, pp.
<fpage>3</fpage>
<lpage>35</lpage>
</citation>
. For some of the notable studies of Ronsard and music, see
<citation id="ref024" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Tiersot</surname>
<given-names>J.</given-names>
</name>
, ed.,
<source>Ronsard et la musique de son temps</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Leipzig and New York</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1903</year>
)</citation>
; the special issue of
<italic>La revue musicale</italic>
(May 1924) devoted to ‘Ronsard et la musique’, with essays by
<citation id="ref025" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>van den Borren</surname>
<given-names>C.</given-names>
</name>
,
<name>
<surname>Coeuroy</surname>
<given-names>A.</given-names>
</name>
,
<name>
<surname>Laloy</surname>
<given-names>L.</given-names>
</name>
,
<name>
<surname>de Nolhac</surname>
<given-names>P.</given-names>
</name>
,
<name>
<surname>Pincherle</surname>
<given-names>M.</given-names>
</name>
,
<name>
<surname>Prunières</surname>
<given-names>H.</given-names>
</name>
,
<name>
<surname>Schaeffner</surname>
<given-names>A.</given-names>
</name>
and
<name>
<surname>Suarès</surname>
<given-names>A.</given-names>
</name>
;
<name>
<surname>Lebègue</surname>
<given-names>R.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘Ronsard et la musique’,
<source>Musique et poésie au XVIe siècle</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Jacquot</surname>
<given-names>J.</given-names>
</name>
(
<publisher-loc>Paris</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1954</year>
), pp.
<fpage>105</fpage>
–19</citation>
;
<citation id="ref026" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Igly</surname>
<given-names>F.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Pierre de Ronsard et ses musiciens: sélection des meilleurs poèmes de Ronsard</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Paris</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1955</year>
)</citation>
;
<citation id="ref027" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Silver</surname>
<given-names>I.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Ronsard and the Hellenic Renaissance in France</source>
, 3 vols. (
<publisher-loc>Geneva</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1981</year>
)</citation>
; the special issue of the
<citation id="ref028" citation-type="journal">
<source>Revue de Musicologie</source>
,
<volume>74</volume>
(
<year>1988</year>
)</citation>
, devoted to ‘Les musiciens de Ronsard’ with essays by I. Bossuyt, J. Brooks, G. Dottin, G. Durosoir, J.-P. Ouvrard and J.-M. Vaccaro; and
<citation id="ref029" citation-type="thesis">
<name>
<surname>Brooks</surname>
<given-names>J.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘French Chanson Collections on the Texts of Pierre de Ronsard, 1570–1580’ (Ph.D. dissertation,
<publisher-name>Catholic University of America</publisher-name>
,
<year>1990</year>
)</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn15" symbol="15">
<label>
<sup>15</sup>
</label>
<p>
<citation id="ref030" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>Ronsard</surname>
</name>
,
<italic>Abbregé</italic>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Laumonier</surname>
</name>
, p.
<fpage>9</fpage>
</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn16" symbol="16">
<label>
<sup>16</sup>
</label>
<p>
<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref030">Ibid.</xref>
, pp. 8–9.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn17" symbol="17">
<label>
<sup>17</sup>
</label>
<p>
<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref030">Ibid.</xref>
, pp. 27–8.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn18" symbol="18">
<label>
<sup>18</sup>
</label>
<p>
<citation id="ref031" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>McGowan</surname>
</name>
,
<italic>Ideal Forms</italic>
, pp.
<fpage>79</fpage>
<lpage>80</lpage>
</citation>
. The
<italic>Hymne de France</italic>
is published in a modern edition in
<citation id="ref032" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>Ronsard</surname>
</name>
,
<italic>Oeuvres</italic>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Laumonier</surname>
</name>
,
<sc>i</sc>
, pp.
<fpage>24</fpage>
<lpage>35</lpage>
</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn19" symbol="19">
<label>
<sup>19</sup>
</label>
<p>
<citation id="ref033" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Ronsard</surname>
</name>
,
<source>Oeuvres</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Laumonier</surname>
</name>
,
<volume>i</volume>
, p.
<fpage>32</fpage>
</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn20" symbol="20">
<label>
<sup>20</sup>
</label>
<p>
<citation id="ref034" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>McGowan</surname>
</name>
,
<italic>Ideal Forms</italic>
, pp.
<fpage>40</fpage>
</citation>
(
<italic>Ode à Michel de l'Hospital</italic>
), 48 (
<italic>Hymne de l'esté</italic>
and
<italic>Hymne de l'hiver</italic>
), 47 (
<italic>Hymne de Henri II</italic>
), 155 (
<italic>Ode à Monseigneur le Dauphin</italic>
), 156 (
<italic>Hymne de l'éternité</italic>
), 35 (
<italic>Bergerie</italic>
) and 35 (
<italic>La lyre</italic>
).</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn21" symbol="21">
<label>
<sup>21</sup>
</label>
<p>On Ronsard's many uses of music as metaphor, see
<citation id="ref035" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Jeffery</surname>
<given-names>B.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘The Idea of Music in Ronsard's Poetry’,
<source>Ronsard the Poet</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Cave</surname>
<given-names>T.</given-names>
</name>
(
<publisher-loc>London</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1973</year>
),
<fpage>209</fpage>
–39</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn22" symbol="22">
<label>
<sup>22</sup>
</label>
<p>The 1552
<italic>Amours</italic>
are published in a modern edition, among other places, in
<citation id="ref036" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Ronsard</surname>
</name>
,
<source>Oeuvres</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Cohen</surname>
</name>
,
<volume>i</volume>
, pp.
<fpage>3</fpage>
<lpage>110</lpage>
</citation>
, and in
<citation id="ref037" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Ronsard</surname>
</name>
,
<source>Oeuvres</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Laumonier</surname>
</name>
,
<volume>iv</volume>
(
<year>1925</year>
)</citation>
. The musical supplement is published in facsimile in
<citation id="ref038" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Ronsard</surname>
</name>
,
<source>Oeuvres</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Laumonier</surname>
</name>
,
<volume>iv</volume>
, pp.
<fpage>189</fpage>
<lpage>250</lpage>
</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn23" symbol="23">
<label>
<sup>23</sup>
</label>
<p>Seven of the nine musical examples are published in a modern edition in Expert,
<italic>La fleur</italic>
. For some doubts about whether the music for the
<italic>Hymne triumphal sur le trespas de Marguerite</italic>
was intended for all forty stanzas, see
<citation id="ref039" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Egan-Buffet</surname>
<given-names>M.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Les chansons de Claude Goudimel: analyses modales et stylistiques</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Ottawa</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1992</year>
), pp.
<fpage>442</fpage>
–3</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn24" symbol="24">
<label>
<sup>24</sup>
</label>
<p>The best examples of music published as apparently vocal polyphony but performed in a variety of ways are the commemorative editions of Italian
<italic>intermedi</italic>
, on which see, among other studies,
<citation id="ref040" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Brown</surname>
<given-names>H. M.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Sixteenth-Century Instrumentation: the Music for the Florentine Intermedii</source>
, Musicological Studies and Documents 30 (
<publisher-loc>Rome</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1973</year>
)</citation>
. The early sixteenth-century repertory of frottolas constitutes another large group of compositions published as vocal polyphony but either intended primarily as solo songs, else most often performed in that way. There are also, of course, the innumerable sixteenth-century versions of vocal polyphony arranged for lute or keyboard, whose existence suggests that performers felt free to arrange in a variety of ways the music they found in printed and manuscript sources.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn25" symbol="25">
<label>
<sup>25</sup>
</label>
<p>A modern edition of
<italic>Nature ornant</italic>
appears in Expert,
<italic>La fleur</italic>
, pp. 25–8; and also
<citation id="ref041" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Janequin</surname>
<given-names>C.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Chansons polyphoniques</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Merritt</surname>
<given-names>A. T.</given-names>
</name>
and
<name>
<surname>Lesure</surname>
<given-names>F.</given-names>
</name>
, 6 vols. (
<publisher-loc>Monaco</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1965</year>
<year>1971</year>
; repr. 1983),
<volume>v</volume>
, pp.
<fpage>191</fpage>
–5</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn26" symbol="26">
<label>
<sup>26</sup>
</label>
<p>A modern edition of Goudimel's setting of the ode appears in Expert,
<italic>La fleur</italic>
, pp. 14–20, and in
<citation id="ref042" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Goudimel</surname>
<given-names>C.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Oeuvres complètes,
<sc>xiii</sc>
<sc>xiv</sc>
: Chansons</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Pidoux</surname>
<given-names>P.</given-names>
</name>
and
<name>
<surname>Egan</surname>
<given-names>M.</given-names>
</name>
(
<publisher-loc>New York and Basle</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1974</year>
<year>1983</year>
),
<volume>xiii</volume>
, pp.
<fpage>80</fpage>
–5</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn27" symbol="27">
<label>
<sup>27</sup>
</label>
<p>On fifteenth- and sixteenth-century musical formulas for declaiming poetry, see
<citation id="ref043" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Pirrotta</surname>
<given-names>N.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘Early Opera and Aria’,
<source>New Looks at Italian Opera: Essays in Honor of Donald J. Grout</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Austin</surname>
<given-names>W. W.</given-names>
</name>
(
<publisher-loc>Ithaca, NY</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1968</year>
), pp.
<fpage>39</fpage>
<lpage>107</lpage>
</citation>
; republished Italian as ‘Inizio dell'opera e aria’, in
<citation id="ref044" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Pirrotta</surname>
</name>
,
<source>Li due Orfei: da Poliziano a Monteverdi</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Turin</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1969</year>
; 2nd rev. edn, 1975), pp.
<fpage>276</fpage>
<lpage>333</lpage>
</citation>
; translated into English by
<citation id="ref045" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Eales</surname>
<given-names>K.</given-names>
</name>
as
<source>Music and Theatre from Poliziano to Monteverdi</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Cambridge</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1982</year>
)</citation>
. On Pietrobono of Ferrara, see
<citation id="ref046" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Lockwood</surname>
<given-names>L.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘
<article-title>Pietrobono and the Instrumental Tradition of Ferrara in the Fifteenth Century</article-title>
’,
<source>Rivista Italiana di Musicologia</source>
,
<volume>10</volume>
(
<year>1975</year>
), pp.
<fpage>115</fpage>
–33</citation>
, and
<citation id="ref047" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Lockwood</surname>
</name>
,
<source>Music in Renaissance Ferrara, 1400–1505</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Oxford</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1984</year>
), esp. pp.
<fpage>96</fpage>
<lpage>108</lpage>
</citation>
. On Serafino, see
<citation id="ref048" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Bauer-Formiconi</surname>
<given-names>B.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Die Strambotti des Serafino dall'Aquila: Studien und Texte zur italienischen Spiel- und Scherzdichtung des ausgehenden 15. Jahrhunderts</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Munich</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1967</year>
)</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn28" symbol="28">
<label>
<sup>28</sup>
</label>
<p>See
<citation id="ref049" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Prizer</surname>
<given-names>W. F.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘
<article-title>The Frottola and the Unwritten Tradition</article-title>
’,
<source>Studi Musicali</source>
,
<volume>12</volume>
(
<year>1983</year>
), pp.
<fpage>203</fpage>
–19</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn29" symbol="29">
<label>
<sup>29</sup>
</label>
<p>See, for example, the arias in the lutebook of the Florentine courtier and lutenist Cosimo Bottegari (Modena, Biblioteca Estense, MS C 311), published in a modern edition as
<citation id="ref050" citation-type="book">
<source>The Bottegari Lutebook</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>MacClintock</surname>
<given-names>C.</given-names>
</name>
(
<publisher-loc>Wellesley, MA</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1965</year>
)</citation>
. For other arias from the late sixteenth century, see also under ‘Aria’ in the index of first lines and titles in
<citation id="ref051" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Brown</surname>
<given-names>H. M.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Instrumental Music Printed Before 1600</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Cambridge, MA</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1965</year>
)</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn30" symbol="30">
<label>
<sup>30</sup>
</label>
<p>On Bembo's goals, see, among other studies,
<citation id="ref052" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Mace</surname>
<given-names>D.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘
<article-title>Pietro Bembo and the Literary Origins of the Italian Madrigal</article-title>
’,
<source>Musical Quarterly</source>
,
<volume>55</volume>
(
<year>1969</year>
), pp.
<fpage>65</fpage>
<lpage>86</lpage>
</citation>
, and
<citation id="ref053" citation-type="thesis">
<name>
<surname>Feldman</surname>
<given-names>M.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘Venice and the Madrigal in the Mid-Sixteenth Century’ (Ph.D. dissertation,
<publisher-name>University of Pennsylvania</publisher-name>
,
<year>1987</year>
)</citation>
. Quite apart from the influence of Italy on the development of the French chanson in the second half of the sixteenth century, we also need to address the question of the diffusion of the French chanson in other countries, a topic not dealt with in the present essay. For some excellent beginnings in this direction, see I. Fenlon, ‘La diffusion de la chanson continentale dans les manuscrits anglais’; P. Walls, ‘La chanson dans les masques à la cour de Jacques Ier d'Angleterre: “The Music of the King's Peace” ’; D. Becker, ‘Deux aspects de la chanson polyphonique en Espagne: le chansonnier d'Uppsala et la “Recopilacion” de Juan Vasquez’; I. Bossuyt, ‘La chanson française en Allemagne et en Autriche dans la seconde moitié du XVIe siècle’; L. Virágh, ‘Les diverses formes de la musique vocale profane en Hongrie au XVIe siècle’; and
<citation id="ref054" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>Pozniak</surname>
<given-names>P.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘Aspects de la chanson en Pologne au XVIe siècle’, all in
<italic>La chanson à la Renaissance</italic>
, ed.
<name>
<surname></surname>
<given-names>Vaccaro</given-names>
</name>
, pp.
<fpage>172</fpage>
<lpage>208</lpage>
,
<fpage>275</fpage>
<lpage>303</lpage>
and
<fpage>322</fpage>
–46</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn31" symbol="31">
<label>
<sup>31</sup>
</label>
<p>
<citation id="ref055" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Yates</surname>
<given-names>F. A.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>The French Academies of the Sixteenth Century</source>
(
<publisher-loc>London</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1947</year>
; repr. with foreword by J. B. Trapp, 1988), pp.
<fpage>1</fpage>
<lpage>19</lpage>
.</citation>
</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn32" symbol="32">
<label>
<sup>32</sup>
</label>
<p>On Saint-Gelais, see
<citation id="ref056" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Dobbins</surname>
<given-names>F.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘Saint-Gelais, Mellin de’,
<source>The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Sadie</surname>
<given-names>S.</given-names>
</name>
, 20 vols. (
<publisher-loc>London</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1980</year>
),
<volume>xvi</volume>
, pp.
<fpage>390</fpage>
–1</citation>
; and
<citation id="ref057" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Stone</surname>
<given-names>D.</given-names>
<suffix>jr</suffix>
</name>
ed.,
<name>
<surname>Saint-Gelais</surname>
<given-names>M. de</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Oeuvres poétiques françaises</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Paris</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1993</year>
–)</citation>
. On Scève, see
<citation id="ref058" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>Saulnier</surname>
<given-names>V. L.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘Maurice Scève et la musique’,
<italic>Musique et poésie au XVIe siècle</italic>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Jacquot</surname>
</name>
, pp.
<fpage>89</fpage>
<lpage>103</lpage>
</citation>
; and
<citation id="ref059" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Coleman</surname>
<given-names>D. G.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Maurice Scève: Poet of Love: Tradition and Originality</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Cambridge</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1975</year>
)</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn33" symbol="33">
<label>
<sup>33</sup>
</label>
<p>Dobbins, ‘Saint-Gelais’.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn34" symbol="34">
<label>
<sup>34</sup>
</label>
<p>
<citation id="ref060" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Aneau</surname>
<given-names>B.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Quintil Horatien</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Lyons</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1556</year>
)</citation>
, is quoted in
<citation id="ref061" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>Dobbins</surname>
</name>
,
<italic>Music in Renaissance Lyons</italic>
, p.
<fpage>76</fpage>
</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn35" symbol="35">
<label>
<sup>35</sup>
</label>
<p>See
<citation id="ref062" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>Lebègue</surname>
<given-names>R.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘Ronsard et la musique’,
<italic>Musique et poésie au XVIe siècle</italic>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Jacquot</surname>
</name>
. p.
<fpage>110</fpage>
</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn36" symbol="36">
<label>
<sup>36</sup>
</label>
<p>The two collections are published in a modern edition in, among other places,
<citation id="ref063" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Ronsard</surname>
</name>
,
<source>Oeuvres</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>cohen</surname>
</name>
,
<volume>i</volume>
, pp.
<fpage>915</fpage>
<lpage>1037</lpage>
</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn37" symbol="37">
<label>
<sup>37</sup>
</label>
<p>La Grotte's composition is published in a modern edition in Expert,
<italic>La fleur</italic>
, pp. 62–4.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn38" symbol="38">
<label>
<sup>38</sup>
</label>
<p>La Grotte's setting of Ronsard's hymn is published in a modern edition in Expert,
<italic>La fleur</italic>
, pp. 56–7. Models to follow in studying courtly (and other) festivities may be found in the three volumes on
<citation id="ref064" citation-type="book">
<source>Les fêtes de la Renaissance</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Jacquot</surname>
<given-names>J.</given-names>
</name>
(
<publisher-loc>Paris</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1956</year>
<year>1975</year>
)</citation>
, even though few of the essays deal with music.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn39" symbol="39">
<label>
<sup>39</sup>
</label>
<p>A selection of Chardavoine's monophonic
<italic>voix de villes</italic>
are published in a modern edition in
<citation id="ref065" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>Expert</surname>
</name>
,
<italic>La fleur</italic>
, pp.
<fpage>74</fpage>
<lpage>80</lpage>
</citation>
; see also the facsimile of the 1576 edition (Geneva, 1980). On the repertory of monophonic melodies, see
<citation id="ref066" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>Levy</surname>
<given-names>K. J.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘Vaudeville,
<italic>vers mesurés et airs de cour’, Musique et poésie au XVIe siècle</italic>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Jacquot</surname>
</name>
, pp.
<fpage>185</fpage>
–99</citation>
; and also
<citation id="ref067" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>Heartz</surname>
<given-names>D.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘
<italic>Voix de ville</italic>
: between Humanist Ideals and Musical Realities’,
<italic>Words and Music: the Scholar's View: a Medley of Problems and Solutions Compiled in Honor of A. Tillman Merritt</italic>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Berman</surname>
<given-names>L.</given-names>
</name>
(Cambridge, MA,
<year>1972</year>
), pp.
<fpage>115</fpage>
–35</citation>
; and
<citation id="ref068" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Heartz</surname>
</name>
, ‘The Chanson in the Humanist Era’,
<source>Current Thoughts in Musicology</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Grubbs</surname>
<given-names>J. W.</given-names>
</name>
(
<publisher-loc>Austin, TX, and London</publisher-loc>
),
<year>1976</year>
pp.
<fpage>193</fpage>
<lpage>230</lpage>
</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn40" symbol="40">
<label>
<sup>40</sup>
</label>
<p>For some examples, see
<citation id="ref069" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>Arcadelt</surname>
<given-names>J.</given-names>
</name>
,
<italic>Opera omnia</italic>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Seay</surname>
<given-names>A.</given-names>
</name>
, 10 vols., Corpus Mensurabilis Musicae 31 (
<year>1965</year>
<year>1970</year>
)</citation>
, VIII, nos. 14, 15, 39, 40, 41, 42, 50, 53, 54, 56, 58, 65, 66, 69, 70, 71, 72, 87, 88, 96 and 98. The most substantial study of this repertory to date is
<citation id="ref070" citation-type="thesis">
<name>
<surname>Whang</surname>
<given-names>J. O.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘From
<italic>Voix de ville to Air de cour</italic>
: the Strophic Chanson, c. 1545–1575’ (Ph.D. dissertation,
<publisher-name>University of Pennsylvania</publisher-name>
,
<year>1981</year>
)</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn41" symbol="41">
<label>
<sup>41</sup>
</label>
<p>On Baïf's
<italic>vers et musique mesurés</italic>
, see
<citation id="ref071" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Walker</surname>
<given-names>D. P.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘
<article-title>The Aims of Baif's Académie de Poésie et de Musique</article-title>
’,
<source>Journal of Renaissance and Baroque Music</source>
,
<volume>1</volume>
(
<year>1946</year>
), pp.
<fpage>91</fpage>
<lpage>100</lpage>
</citation>
;
<citation id="ref072" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Walker</surname>
</name>
, ‘
<article-title>The Influence of
<italic>Musique mesurée à l'antique</italic>
, particularly on the
<italic>Airs de cour</italic>
of the Early Seventeenth Century</article-title>
’,
<source>Musica Disciplina</source>
,
<volume>2</volume>
(
<year>1948</year>
), pp.
<fpage>141</fpage>
–63</citation>
;
<citation id="ref073" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Walker</surname>
</name>
and
<name>
<surname>Lesure</surname>
<given-names>F.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘
<article-title>Claude Le Jeune and Musique mesurée</article-title>
’,
<source>Musica Disciplina</source>
,
<volume>3</volume>
(
<year>1949</year>
), pp.
<fpage>151</fpage>
–70</citation>
; and
<citation id="ref074" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Walker</surname>
</name>
, ‘
<article-title>Some Aspects and Problems of
<italic>Musique mesurée à l'antique</italic>
: the Rhythm and Notation of Musique mesurée</article-title>
’,
<source>Musica Disciplina</source>
,
<volume>4</volume>
(
<year>1950</year>
), pp.
<fpage>163</fpage>
–86</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn42" symbol="42">
<label>
<sup>42</sup>
</label>
<p>For some studies of Protestant music in sixteenth-century France, see
<citation id="ref075" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Douen</surname>
<given-names>E. O.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Clément Marot et le psautier huguenot</source>
, 2 vols. (
<publisher-loc>Paris</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1878</year>
<year>1879</year>
)</citation>
;
<citation id="ref076" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Cauchie</surname>
<given-names>M.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘Les psaumes de Janequin’,
<source>Mélanges de musicologie offerts à M. Lionel de La Laurencie</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Paris</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1933</year>
), pp.
<fpage>47</fpage>
<lpage>56</lpage>
</citation>
;
<citation id="ref077" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>Rollin</surname>
<given-names>J.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘La musique religieuse protestante française’,
<italic>Revue Musicale</italic>
, nos. 222–3 (
<year>1954</year>
), pp.
<fpage>138</fpage>
–56</citation>
; and
<citation id="ref078" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Pidoux</surname>
<given-names>P.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Le psautier huguenot du XVIe siècle</source>
, 2 vols. (
<publisher-loc>Basle</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1961</year>
)</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn43" symbol="43">
<label>
<sup>43</sup>
</label>
<p>Although Arcadelt has been studied as a madrigalist, scholars have ignored his chansons.
<citation id="ref079" citation-type="thesis">
<name>
<surname>Agnel</surname>
<given-names>A.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘Les chansons polyphoniques de Pierre Certon’ (Ph.D. dissertation,
<publisher-name>University of Paris</publisher-name>
,
<year>1970</year>
)</citation>
, the work most likely to shed light on the chansons of the 1550s, has not been available to me. On Goudimel, see Egan-Buffet,
<italic>Les chansons de Claude Goudimel</italic>
. On Janequin, the series of articles by
<citation id="ref080" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Lesure</surname>
<given-names>F.</given-names>
</name>
– ‘
<article-title>Clément Janequin: recherches sur sa vie et sur son oeuvre</article-title>
’,
<source>Musica Disciplina</source>
,
<volume>5</volume>
(
<year>1951</year>
), pp.
<fpage>157</fpage>
–93</citation>
; (with P. Roudié)
<citation id="ref081" citation-type="journal">
<article-title>Clément Janequin, chantre de François Ier (1531)</article-title>
’,
<source>Revue de Musicologie</source>
,
<volume>43</volume>
<issue>4</issue>
(
<year>1959</year>
), pp.
<fpage>193</fpage>
–8</citation>
; and (with P. Roudié)
<citation id="ref082" citation-type="journal">
<article-title>La jeunesse bordelaise de Clément Janequin</article-title>
’,
<source>Revue de Musicologie</source>
,
<volume>49</volume>
(
<year>1963</year>
), pp.
<fpage>172</fpage>
–83</citation>
– remain our chief source of information on the composer and his music.
<citation id="ref083" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>Margolin</surname>
<given-names>J.-C.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘L'expression de la culture populaire dans les chansons de Clément Janequin’,
<italic>La chanson à la Renaissance</italic>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Vaccaro</surname>
</name>
, pp.
<fpage>120</fpage>
–38</citation>
, offers a useful view of one aspect of Janequin's oeuvre.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn44" symbol="44">
<label>
<sup>44</sup>
</label>
<p>
<citation id="ref084" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Certon</surname>
<given-names>P.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Complete Chansons Published by Le Roy and Ballard</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Bernstein</surname>
<given-names>J. A.</given-names>
</name>
, The Sixteenth-century chanson 6 (
<publisher-loc>New York</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1990</year>
)</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn45" symbol="45">
<label>
<sup>45</sup>
</label>
<p>
<citation id="ref085" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Thibault</surname>
<given-names>G.</given-names>
</name>
and
<name>
<surname>Perceau</surname>
<given-names>L.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Bibliographie des poésies de P. de Ronsard mises en musique au XVIe siècle</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Paris</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1941</year>
)</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn46" symbol="46">
<label>
<sup>46</sup>
</label>
<p>The three chansons by Certon appear in Bernstein, pp. 143–6, 94–7 and 90–3.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn47" symbol="47">
<label>
<sup>47</sup>
</label>
<p>See
<citation id="ref086" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>de Lassus</surname>
<given-names>O.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Sämtliche Werke, XIV: Kompositionen mit französischem Text</source>
,
<volume>ii</volume>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Leuchtmann</surname>
<given-names>H.</given-names>
</name>
(
<publisher-loc>Wiesbaden</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1981</year>
), p.
<fpage>xxv</fpage>
</citation>
, for the information that the poem was published in
<citation id="ref087" citation-type="other">
<italic>Recueil de vray poesie française</italic>
(Paris,
<year>1543</year>
)</citation>
. See also
<citation id="ref088" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Ronsard</surname>
</name>
,
<source>Oeuvres</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Laumonier</surname>
</name>
,
<volume>i</volume>
, p.
<fpage>137</fpage>
and
<sc>vii</sc>
, p.
<fpage>186</fpage>
</citation>
, where the poem is published and its sources noted.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn48" symbol="48">
<label>
<sup>48</sup>
</label>
<p>Modern edition in
<citation id="ref089" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Roussel</surname>
<given-names>F.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Opera omnia</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Garden</surname>
<given-names>G.</given-names>
</name>
, 5 vols., Corpus Mensurabilis Musicae 83 (
<year>1980</year>
<year>1982</year>
),
<volume>v</volume>
, pp.
<fpage>6</fpage>
<lpage>7</lpage>
</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn49" symbol="49">
<label>
<sup>49</sup>
</label>
<p>Modern edition in The Sixteenth-Century Chanson 7, ed. J. A. Bernstein (New York, 1988), pp. 99–101.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn50" symbol="50">
<label>
<sup>50</sup>
</label>
<p>Modern edition in
<citation id="ref090" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>Lassus</surname>
</name>
,
<italic>Kompositionen mit französischem Text</italic>
,
<sc>ii</sc>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Leuchtmann</surname>
</name>
, pp.
<fpage>88</fpage>
<lpage>91</lpage>
</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn51" symbol="51">
<label>
<sup>51</sup>
</label>
<p>Appendixes 3–5 are derived from the information in
<citation id="ref091" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Lesure</surname>
<given-names>F.</given-names>
</name>
and
<name>
<surname>Thibault</surname>
<given-names>G.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Bibliographie des éditions d'Adrian Le Roy et Robert Ballard (1551–1598)</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Paris</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1955</year>
)</citation>
. For a bibliography of all the chansons published in the sixteenth century, see
<citation id="ref092" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Daschner</surname>
<given-names>H.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Die gedruckten mehrstimmigen Chansons von 1500–1600: literarische Quellen und Bibliographie</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Bonn</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1962</year>
)</citation>
. For a bibliography of the sources of poetic texts, see
<citation id="ref093" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Lachèvre</surname>
<given-names>F.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Bibliographie des recueils collectifs de poésies du XVIe siècle</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Paris</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1922</year>
)</citation>
. The best overview of French secular music in the second half of the sixteenth century remains
<citation id="ref094" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Lesure</surname>
<given-names>F.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Musicians and Poets of the French Renaissance</source>
(
<publisher-loc>New York</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1955</year>
)</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn52" symbol="52">
<label>
<sup>52</sup>
</label>
<p>
<citation id="ref095" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Lesure</surname>
<given-names>F.</given-names>
</name>
and
<name>
<surname>Thibault</surname>
<given-names>G.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘
<article-title>Bibliographie des éditions musicales publiées par Nicolas du Chemin (1549–1576)</article-title>
’,
<source>Annales Musicologiques</source>
,
<volume>1</volume>
(
<year>1953</year>
), pp.
<fpage>269</fpage>
<lpage>373</lpage>
</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn53" symbol="53">
<label>
<sup>53</sup>
</label>
<p>On Fezandat, see
<citation id="ref096" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Dobbins</surname>
<given-names>F.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘
<article-title>Fezandat, Michel</article-title>
’,
<source>The New Grove Dictionary</source>
,
<volume>vi</volume>
, p.
<fpage>519</fpage>
</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn54" symbol="54">
<label>
<sup>54</sup>
</label>
<p>See, for example,
<citation id="ref097" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Renouard</surname>
<given-names>P.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Imprimeurs parisiens</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Paris</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1898</year>
)</citation>
, and
<citation id="ref098" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Heartz</surname>
<given-names>D.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘
<article-title>Parisian Music Publishing under Henri II</article-title>
’,
<source>Musical Quarterly</source>
,
<volume>46</volume>
(
<year>1960</year>
), pp.
<fpage>448</fpage>
–67</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn55" symbol="55">
<label>
<sup>55</sup>
</label>
<p>
<citation id="ref099" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Pogue</surname>
<given-names>S.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Jacques Moderne: Lyons Music Printer of the Sixteenth Century</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Geneva</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1969</year>
)</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn56" symbol="56">
<label>
<sup>56</sup>
</label>
<p>
<citation id="ref100" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>Dobbins</surname>
</name>
,
<italic>Music in Renaissance Lyons</italic>
, pp.
<fpage>173</fpage>
–4</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn57" symbol="57">
<label>
<sup>57</sup>
</label>
<p>See
<citation id="ref101" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>Dobbins</surname>
</name>
,
<italic>Music in Renaissance Lyons</italic>
, pp.
<fpage>185</fpage>
–8</citation>
. A selection of chansons by Villiers appears in
<citation id="ref102" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Miller</surname>
<given-names>L. E.</given-names>
</name>
, ed.,
<source>Thirty-Six Chansons by French Provincial Composers (1529– 1550)</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Madison, WI</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1981</year>
)</citation>
, where the composer's first name is given as Pierre.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn58" symbol="58">
<label>
<sup>58</sup>
</label>
<p>Layolle's music is published in
<citation id="ref103" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>D'Accone</surname>
<given-names>F. A.</given-names>
</name>
, ed.,
<italic>Music of the Florentine Renaissance</italic>
, Corpus Mensurabilis Musicae 32/
<sc>iii</sc>
<sc>vi</sc>
(
<year>1969</year>
<year>1973</year>
)</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn59" symbol="59">
<label>
<sup>59</sup>
</label>
<p>
<citation id="ref104" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Guillo</surname>
<given-names>L.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Les éditions musicales de la Renaissance Lyonnaise</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Paris</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1991</year>
)</citation>
; see also
<citation id="ref105" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>Dobbins</surname>
</name>
,
<italic>Music in Renaissance Lyons</italic>
, chapter 4: ‘Music Copied and Printed in Lyons’, pp.
<fpage>134</fpage>
–72</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn60" symbol="60">
<label>
<sup>60</sup>
</label>
<p>Certon's
<italic>Meslanges</italic>
is described and its contents listed in Lesure and Thibault, ‘Bibliographie des éditions musicales publiées par Nicolas du Chemin’, pp. 343–5. Perhaps the three volumes of music by Josquin and the four by Janequin also published by Du Chemin should be included in the list of large, commemorative editions, although they are not called ‘meslanges’. On that question, see
<citation id="ref106" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>His</surname>
<given-names>I.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘
<article-title>Les
<italic>Mélanges</italic>
musicaux au XVIe et au début du XVIIe siècle</article-title>
’,
<source>Nouvelle Revue du Seizième Siècle</source>
,
<volume>8</volume>
(
<year>1990</year>
), pp
<fpage>95</fpage>
<lpage>110</lpage>
</citation>
. In any case, both Du Chemin and Le Roy and Ballard seem to make distinctions between large, commemorative editions and volumes that contain a particular segment of one composer's works; and they also distinguish between books of newer or more current chansons, and collective editions (for example, the
<italic>livres de recueil</italic>
in Du Chemin's case) that mostly reprint the best or most successful chansons from their previous anthologies or from the past. The importance of these
<italic>mélanges</italic>
has become clear to me in discussions with Kate van Orden, at the time of writing a graduate student at the University of Chicago working on a dissertation on poetry and music in France in the second half of the sixteenth century. Her ideas inform a good many parts of the present essay, and I am grateful to her for sharing them with me.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn61" symbol="61">
<label>
<sup>61</sup>
</label>
<p>The chansons of Lassus, including those in the 1570
<italic>meslange</italic>
, are published in a modern edition in
<citation id="ref107" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>Lassus</surname>
</name>
,
<italic>Sämtliche Werke</italic>
,
<sc>xii, xiv</sc>
and
<sc>xvi</sc>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Leuchtmann</surname>
</name>
(
<year>1981</year>
<year>1982</year>
)</citation>
. On his chansons, see
<citation id="ref108" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Boetticher</surname>
<given-names>W.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Orlando di Lasso und seine Zeit, 1532–1594</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Kassel and Basle</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1958</year>
)</citation>
;
<citation id="ref109" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Bernstein</surname>
<given-names>J.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘
<article-title>Lassus in English Sources: Two Chansons Recovered</article-title>
’,
<source>Journal of the American Musicological Society</source>
,
<volume>27</volume>
(
<year>1974</year>
), pp.
<fpage>315</fpage>
–25</citation>
;
<citation id="ref110" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>Dobbins</surname>
<given-names>F.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘Lassus – Borrower or Lender: the Chansons’,
<italic>Revue Belge de Musicologie</italic>
,
<fpage>39</fpage>
<lpage>40</lpage>
(
<year>1985</year>
<year>1986</year>
), pp.
<fpage>101</fpage>
–57</citation>
; and J.-M. Vaccaro, ‘Roland de Lassus, les luthistes et la chanson’,
<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref110">ibid.</xref>
, pp. 158–74. Costeley's chansons are published in modern editions in
<citation id="ref111" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Costeley</surname>
<given-names>G.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Musique</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Expert</surname>
<given-names>H.</given-names>
</name>
, Les Maîtres Musiciens de la Renaissance Française 3, 18 and 19 (
<publisher-loc>Paris</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1896</year>
<year>1903</year>
; repr. New York, n.d.)</citation>
;
<citation id="ref112" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Costeley</surname>
</name>
,
<source>Selected Chansons</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Bernstein</surname>
<given-names>J. A.</given-names>
</name>
, The Sixteenth-Century Chanson 8 (
<publisher-loc>New York</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1989</year>
)</citation>
, and in
<citation id="ref113" citation-type="thesis">
<name>
<surname>Godt</surname>
<given-names>I.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘Guillaume Costeley: Life and Works’ (Ph.D. dissertation,
<publisher-name>New York University</publisher-name>
,
<year>1969</year>
)</citation>
. The chansons of Le Jeune are published in a modern edition in
<citation id="ref114" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Le Jeune</surname>
</name>
,
<source>Mélanges</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Expert</surname>
<given-names>H.</given-names>
</name>
, Les Maîtres Musiciens de la Renaissance Française,
<volume>16</volume>
(
<publisher-loc>Paris</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1903</year>
; repr. New York, 1965)</citation>
; Le Jeune,
<italic>Le printemps</italic>
, ed. Expert,
<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref114">ibid.</xref>
12–14 (Paris, 1900–1901; repr. New York, 1963);
<citation id="ref115" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Le Jeune</surname>
</name>
,
<source>Complete Unpublished Chansons</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Bernstein</surname>
<given-names>J. A.</given-names>
</name>
, The Sixteenth-Century Chanson 16–17 (
<publisher-loc>New York</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1989</year>
<year>1990</year>
)</citation>
; and
<citation id="ref116" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Le Jeune</surname>
</name>
,
<source>Airs of 1608</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Walker</surname>
<given-names>D. P.</given-names>
</name>
and
<name>
<surname>Lesure</surname>
<given-names>F.</given-names>
</name>
, 4 vols., AIM Miscellanea 1–4 (
<publisher-loc>Rome</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1951</year>
<year>1919</year>
)</citation>
. See also
<citation id="ref117" citation-type="thesis">
<name>
<surname>His</surname>
<given-names>I.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘Les
<italic>Mélanges</italic>
de Claude Le Jeune (Anvers: Plantin, 1585): transcription et étude critique’ (Ph.D. dissertation,
<publisher-name>University of Tours</publisher-name>
,
<year>1990</year>
)</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn62" symbol="62">
<label>
<sup>62</sup>
</label>
<p>For a modern edition of the collection, see Jacobs, ed.,
<italic>Le Roy & Ballard's 1572 Mellange</italic>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn63" symbol="63">
<label>
<sup>63</sup>
</label>
<p>The chansons of Goudimel are published in a modern edition in
<citation id="ref118" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>Goudimel</surname>
</name>
,
<italic>Oeuvres complètes</italic>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Pidoux</surname>
</name>
and
<name>
<surname>Egan</surname>
</name>
,
<fpage>xiii</fpage>
<lpage>xiv</lpage>
</citation>
. On his chansons, see M. Egan[-Buffet], ‘Problèmes d'interprétation rythmique dans les chansons de Claude Goudimel’,
<citation id="ref119" citation-type="other">
<italic>La chanson à la Renaissance</italic>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Vaccaro</surname>
</name>
, pp.
<fpage>139</fpage>
–56</citation>
; and Egan-Buffet,
<italic>Les chansons de Claude Goudimel</italic>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn64" symbol="64">
<label>
<sup>64</sup>
</label>
<p>For a brief sketch of musical life in Toulouse, with helpful indications of subjects for further study, see
<citation id="ref120" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Dobbins</surname>
<given-names>F.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘
<article-title>Toulouse</article-title>
’,
<source>The New Grove Dictionary</source>
,
<volume>xix</volume>
, pp.
<fpage>92</fpage>
–3</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn65" symbol="65">
<label>
<sup>65</sup>
</label>
<p>On Bertrand, see
<citation id="ref121" citation-type="thesis">
<name>
<surname>Vaccaro</surname>
<given-names>J.-M.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘Musique et poésie à l'époque de la Pléïade: Anthoine de Bertrand 1540–1381’ (master's thesis,
<publisher-name>University of Poitiers</publisher-name>
,
<year>1965</year>
)</citation>
;
<citation id="ref122" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Vaccaro</surname>
</name>
, ‘
<article-title>Le livre d'airs spirituels d'Anthoine de Bertrand</article-title>
’,
<source>Revue de Musicologie</source>
,
<volume>56</volume>
(
<year>1970</year>
), pp.
<fpage>35</fpage>
<lpage>53</lpage>
; (
<year>1970</year>
), pp.
<fpage>35</fpage>
<lpage>53</lpage>
</citation>
;
<citation id="ref123" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Vaccaro</surname>
</name>
, ‘
<article-title>Les préfaces d'Anthoine de Bertrand</article-title>
’,
<source>Revue de Musicologie</source>
,
<volume>74</volume>
(
<year>1988</year>
), pp.
<fpage>221</fpage>
–36</citation>
;
<citation id="ref124" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Vaccaro</surname>
</name>
, ‘Anthoine de Bertrand:
<italic>Las! pour vous trop aymer</italic>
’,
<source>Models of Musical Analysis: Music before 1600</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Everist</surname>
<given-names>M.</given-names>
</name>
(
<publisher-loc>Oxford</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1992</year>
), pp.
<fpage>175</fpage>
<lpage>207</lpage>
</citation>
;
<citation id="ref125" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Thibault</surname>
<given-names>G.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘Anthoine de Bertrand, musicien de Ronsard, et ses amis toulousains’,
<source>Mélanges offerts à M. Abel Lefranc</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Paris</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1936</year>
), pp.
<fpage>282</fpage>
<lpage>300</lpage>
</citation>
;
<citation id="ref126" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Brooks</surname>
<given-names>J.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘
<article-title>“Ses Amours et les miennes tout ensemble”: la Structure cyclique du
<italic>Premier livre</italic>
d'Anthoine de Bertrand</article-title>
’,
<source>Revue de Musicologie</source>
,
<volume>74</volume>
(
<year>1988</year>
), pp.
<fpage>201</fpage>
–20</citation>
; Brooks, ‘French Chanson Collections’, esp. pp. 204–72.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn66" symbol="66">
<label>
<sup>66</sup>
</label>
<p>Susato's publications are listed and described in
<citation id="ref127" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Meissner</surname>
<given-names>U.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Der Antwerpener Notendrucker Tylman Susato</source>
, 2 vols. (
<publisher-loc>Berlin</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1967</year>
)</citation>
. See also
<citation id="ref128" citation-type="thesis">
<name>
<surname>Forney</surname>
<given-names>K.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘Tielman Susato, Sixteenth-Century Music Printer: an Archival and Typographical Investigation’ (Ph.D. dissertation,
<publisher-name>University of Kentucky</publisher-name>
,
<year>1978</year>
)</citation>
. The publications of Phalèse's firm before 1578 are listed and described in
<citation id="ref129" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Vanhulst</surname>
<given-names>H.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Catalogue des éditions de musique publiées à Lourain par Pierre Phalèse et ses fils, 1545–1578</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Brussels</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1990</year>
)</citation>
. Timothy McTaggart is currently completing a dissertation for the University of Chicago on the chansons published by Waelrant and Laet.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn67" symbol="67">
<label>
<sup>67</sup>
</label>
<p>For an exemplary genre study, see
<citation id="ref130" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Adams</surname>
<given-names>C. S.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘
<article-title>Some Aspects of the Chanson for Three Voices during the Sixteenth Century</article-title>
’,
<source>Acta Musicologica</source>
,
<volume>49</volume>
(
<year>1977</year>
). pp.
<fpage>91</fpage>
<lpage>114</lpage>
</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn68" symbol="68">
<label>
<sup>68</sup>
</label>
<p>
<citation id="ref131" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Le Jeune</surname>
<given-names>C.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Dodécacorde, comprising Twelve Psalms of David Set to Music according to the Twelve Modes</source>
, 3 vols., ed.
<name>
<surname>Heider</surname>
<given-names>A. H.</given-names>
</name>
, Recent Researches in the Music of the Renaissance 74–6 (
<publisher-loc>Madison, WI</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1988</year>
)</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn69" symbol="69">
<label>
<sup>69</sup>
</label>
<p>See
<citation id="ref132" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Powers</surname>
<given-names>H.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘
<article-title>Tonal Types and Modal Categories in Renaissance Polyphony</article-title>
’,
<source>Journal of the American Musicological Society</source>
,
<volume>34</volume>
(
<year>1981</year>
), pp.
<fpage>428</fpage>
–70</citation>
. For some attempts to address these questions, see
<citation id="ref133" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Hertin</surname>
<given-names>U.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Die Tonarten in der französischen Chanson des 16. Jahrhunders: Janequin, Sermisy, Costeley, Bertrand</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Munich</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1974</year>
)</citation>
;
<citation id="ref134" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Brown</surname>
<given-names>H. M.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘Theory and Practice in the Sixteenth Century: Preliminary Notes on Attaingnant's Modally Ordered Chansonniers’,
<source>Essays in Musicology: a Tribute to Alvin Johnson</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Lockwood</surname>
<given-names>L.</given-names>
</name>
and
<name>
<surname>Rosener</surname>
<given-names>E.</given-names>
</name>
(
<publisher-loc>Philadelphia</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1990</year>
), pp.
<fpage>75</fpage>
<lpage>100</lpage>
</citation>
;
<citation id="ref135" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Adams</surname>
<given-names>C. S.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘
<article-title>The Early Chanson Anthologies Published by Pierre Attaingnant (1528–1530)</article-title>
’,
<source>Journal of Musicology</source>
,
<volume>5</volume>
(
<year>1987</year>
), pp.
<fpage>527</fpage>
–48</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn70" symbol="70">
<label>
<sup>70</sup>
</label>
<p>For examples, see note 40 above.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn71" symbol="71">
<label>
<sup>71</sup>
</label>
<p>See note 39 above.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn72" symbol="72">
<label>
<sup>72</sup>
</label>
<p>The best introduction to French instrumental dances is
<citation id="ref136" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Vaccaro</surname>
<given-names>J.-M.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>La musique de luth en France au XVIe siècle</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Paris</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1981</year>
)</citation>
. For a bibliography including French instrumental dances of the sixteenth century see Brown,
<italic>Instrumental Music</italic>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn73" symbol="73">
<label>
<sup>73</sup>
</label>
<p>Recent studies of the
<italic>ballet de cour</italic>
include
<citation id="ref137" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>McGowan</surname>
<given-names>M. M.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>L'art du ballet de cour en France, 1581–1643</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Paris</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1963</year>
)</citation>
;
<citation id="ref138" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Christout</surname>
<given-names>M.-F.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Le ballet de cour de Louis XIV, 1643–1672</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Paris</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1967</year>
)</citation>
; and
<citation id="ref139" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Bonniffet</surname>
<given-names>P.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Un ballet démasqué: l'union de la musique au verbe dans ‘Le printans’ de Jean-Antoine de Baïf et Claude Le Jeune</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Paris and Geneva</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1988</year>
)</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn74" symbol="74">
<label>
<sup>74</sup>
</label>
<p>Thibault and Perceau,
<italic>Bibliographie des poésies de P. de Ronsard</italic>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn75" symbol="75">
<label>
<sup>75</sup>
</label>
<p>For studies of Baïf and his circle, see note 41 above.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn76" symbol="76">
<label>
<sup>76</sup>
</label>
<p>For a beginning in this direction, see F. Dobbins, ‘Les madrigalistes français et la Pléiade’ and J.-P. Ouvrard, ‘La chanson française du XVIe siècle: lecture du texte poétique’,
<citation id="ref140" citation-type="other">
<italic>La chanson à la Renaissance</italic>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Vaccaro</surname>
</name>
, pp.
<fpage>157</fpage>
–71 and
<fpage>106</fpage>
–19</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn77" symbol="77">
<label>
<sup>77</sup>
</label>
<p>Modern editions of the two chansons appear in
<citation id="ref141" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>Costeley</surname>
</name>
,
<italic>Selected Chansons</italic>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Bernstein</surname>
</name>
, pp.
<fpage>65</fpage>
–7 and
<fpage>68</fpage>
–9</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn78" symbol="78">
<label>
<sup>78</sup>
</label>
<p>All three appear in Lassus,
<italic>Kompositionen mit französischem Text</italic>
, ii.
<italic>On Susanne un jour</italic>
, see
<citation id="ref142" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Levy</surname>
<given-names>K. J.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘
<article-title>“Susanne un jour”: the History of a 16th Century Chanson</article-title>
’,
<source>Annales Musicologiques</source>
,
<volume>1</volume>
(
<year>1953</year>
), pp.
<fpage>375</fpage>
<lpage>408</lpage>
</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn79" symbol="79">
<label>
<sup>79</sup>
</label>
<p>
<citation id="ref143" citation-type="other">
<italic>La fleur de poésie françoyse: recueil joyeulx contenant plusieurs huictains, dixains, quatrains, chansons & aultres dictez de diverses matières, mis en nottes musicalles par plusieurs auiheurs</italic>
(Paris: Alain Lotrian,
<year>1543</year>
)</citation>
. The volume was republished in a modern edition in
<citation id="ref144" citation-type="other">
<italic>Raretés bibliographiques … pour une société de bibliophiles</italic>
(Paris,
<year>1864</year>
)</citation>
. The title suggests that the collection was made by selecting texts that had already been set to music (mostly from Attaingnant's anthologies of polyphonic song). I am grateful to Kate van Orden for pointing out the importance of this particular collection.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn80" symbol="80">
<label>
<sup>80</sup>
</label>
<p>See, for example,
<citation id="ref145" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Kirsch</surname>
<given-names>W.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘Josquin's Motets in the German Tradition’,
<source>Josquin des Prez</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Lowinsky</surname>
<given-names>E. E.</given-names>
</name>
in collaboration with B. J. Blackburn (
<publisher-loc>London</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1976</year>
), pp.
<fpage>261</fpage>
–78</citation>
. Hirsch does not claim, however, that the revival of Josquin's music is unique.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn81" symbol="81">
<label>
<sup>81</sup>
</label>
<p>Appendix 6 is derived from
<citation id="ref146" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>Lesure</surname>
</name>
and
<name>
<surname>Thibault</surname>
</name>
,
<italic>Bibliographie des éditions d'Adrian Le Roy et Robert Ballard</italic>
, pp.
<fpage>91</fpage>
–4 and
<fpage>156</fpage>
–9</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn82" symbol="82">
<label>
<sup>82</sup>
</label>
<p>On the question of Italian influence and Petrarchism, see, among other studies,
<citation id="ref147" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Weber</surname>
<given-names>H.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>La création poétique au XVIe siècle en France</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Paris</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1955</year>
), esp. pp.
<fpage>12</fpage>
<lpage>22</lpage>
and
<fpage>231</fpage>
–6</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn83" symbol="83">
<label>
<sup>83</sup>
</label>
<p>On Costeley's chromatic chanson, see
<citation id="ref148" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Levy</surname>
<given-names>K. J.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘
<article-title>Costeley's Chromatic Chanson</article-title>
’,
<source>Annales Musicologiques</source>
,
<volume>3</volume>
(
<year>1955</year>
), pp.
<fpage>213</fpage>
–63</citation>
; and
<citation id="ref149" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Dahlhaus</surname>
<given-names>C.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘
<article-title>Zu Costeleys chromatischer Chanson</article-title>
’,
<source>Die Musikforschung</source>
,
<volume>16</volume>
(
<year>1963</year>
), pp.
<fpage>253</fpage>
–65</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn84" symbol="84">
<label>
<sup>84</sup>
</label>
<p>Le Jeune's modally ordered motets are published in a modern edition in Le Jeune,
<italic>Dodécacorde</italic>
, ed. Heider. On modal ordering in Bertrand's chansons, see Brooks, ‘ “Ses amours et les miennes tout ensemble” ’.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn85" symbol="85">
<label>
<sup>85</sup>
</label>
<p>On the literary tradition of imitating Greek odes, see
<citation id="ref150" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Delboulle</surname>
<given-names>A.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Anacréon et les poèmes anacréontiques: texte grec avec les traductions et imitations des poètes du XVIe siècle</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Geneva</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1970</year>
)</citation>
; and
<citation id="ref151" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Rosenmeyer</surname>
<given-names>P.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>The Poetics of Imitation: Anacreon and the Anacreontic Tradition</source>
(
<publisher-loc>New York</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1992</year>
)</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn86" symbol="86">
<label>
<sup>86</sup>
</label>
<p>A fact not noted in Coleman,
<italic>Maurice Scève</italic>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn87" symbol="87">
<label>
<sup>87</sup>
</label>
<p>Appendix 7 is derived from Lesure and Thibault,
<italic>Bibliographie des éditions d'Adrian Le Roy et Robert Ballard</italic>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn88" symbol="88">
<label>
<sup>88</sup>
</label>
<p>Janequin's psalms, for which only a single bass partbook survives, are listed and described in
<citation id="ref152" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>Lesure</surname>
</name>
and
<name>
<surname>Thibault</surname>
</name>
,
<italic>Bibliographic des éditions d'Adrian Le Roy et Robert Ballard</italic>
, pp.
<fpage>81</fpage>
–3</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn89" symbol="89">
<label>
<sup>89</sup>
</label>
<p>See
<citation id="ref153" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>Yates</surname>
</name>
,
<italic>The French Academies</italic>
, pp.
<fpage>1</fpage>
<lpage>35</lpage>
</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn90" symbol="90">
<label>
<sup>90</sup>
</label>
<p>For very brief sketches of music in the reigns of Henri II, Charles IX, Henri III and Henri IV, see
<citation id="ref154" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Cazeaux</surname>
<given-names>I.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>French Music in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Oxford</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1975</year>
)</citation>
, chapter 1: ‘Royal Courts and Music’, pp. 9–32. The information in the following paragraphs devoted to each reign has been assembled from standard reference books. Except for Cazeaux, few music scholars have tried to characterise the state of music under each of the French kings in the second half of the sixteenth century.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn91" symbol="91">
<label>
<sup>91</sup>
</label>
<p>Brantôme is quoted in
<citation id="ref155" citation-type="journal">
<name>
<surname>Verchaly</surname>
<given-names>A.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘
<article-title>Desportes et la musique</article-title>
’,
<source>Annales Musicologiques</source>
,
<volume>2</volume>
(
<year>1954</year>
), p.
<fpage>276</fpage>
</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn92" symbol="92">
<label>
<sup>92</sup>
</label>
<p>The music of Du Caurroy is in the process of being published in modern edition in
<citation id="ref156" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>du Caurroy</surname>
<given-names>E.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Oeuvres complètes</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Pidoux</surname>
<given-names>B.</given-names>
</name>
, 1 vol. to date (
<publisher-loc>Brooklyn</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1975</year>
–)</citation>
. The chansons of Millot originally published by Le Roy and Ballard are available in a modern edition in
<citation id="ref157" citation-type="book">
<source>Chansons issued by Le Roi and Ballard: Nicolas Millot, Marchandy, Nicolas de Marie, Thomas Champion (‘Mithou’), Pierre Moulu, Jean Mouton, Pagnier, Hilaire Penet, Claude Petit Jehan</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Bernstein</surname>
<given-names>J. A.</given-names>
</name>
, The Sixteenth-Century Chanson 19 (
<publisher-loc>New York</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1991</year>
)</citation>
. For the two surviving pieces by
<citation id="ref158" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Vaumesnil</surname>
</name>
,
<source>see Oeuvres de Vaumesnil, Edinthon, Perrichon, Rael, Montbuysson, La Grotte, Saman, La Bane</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Souris</surname>
<given-names>A.</given-names>
</name>
,
<name>
<surname>Rollin</surname>
<given-names>M.</given-names>
</name>
and
<name>
<surname>Vaccaro</surname>
<given-names>J.-M.</given-names>
</name>
(
<publisher-loc>Paris</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1974</year>
)</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn93" symbol="93">
<label>
<sup>93</sup>
</label>
<p>For a beginning in this direction, see
<citation id="ref159" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>Pau</surname>
<given-names>G.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘De l'usage de la chanson spirituelle par les Jésuites au temps de la Contre-Reforme’,
<italic>La chanson à la Renaissance</italic>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Vaccaro</surname>
</name>
, pp.
<fpage>15</fpage>
<lpage>34</lpage>
</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn94" symbol="94">
<label>
<sup>94</sup>
</label>
<p>See Verchaly, ‘Desportes’, pp. 271–345.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn95" symbol="95">
<label>
<sup>95</sup>
</label>
<p>On the Académie du Palais, see Yates,
<italic>The French Academies</italic>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn96" symbol="96">
<label>
<sup>96</sup>
</label>
<p>Facsimiles of the 1582 commemorative edition have been published as
<citation id="ref160" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>de Beauioyeulx</surname>
<given-names>B.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Balet comique de la royne 1582</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Caula</surname>
<given-names>G. A.</given-names>
</name>
(
<publisher-loc>Turin</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1962</year>
)</citation>
, and, more recently, with an introduction by
<citation id="ref161" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>McGowan</surname>
<given-names>M.</given-names>
</name>
, as
<source>Le balet comique by Balthazar de Beaujoyeulx 1581</source>
, Medieval and Renaissance Texts and Studies 6 (
<publisher-loc>Binghamton, NY</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1982</year>
)</citation>
. On the
<italic>balet comique</italic>
, see also
<citation id="ref162" citation-type="other">
<name>
<surname>Yates</surname>
<given-names>F. A.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘Poésie et musique dans les “Magnificences” au mariage du due de Joyeuse’,
<italic>Musique et poésie au XVIe siècle</italic>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Jacquot</surname>
</name>
, pp.
<fpage>241</fpage>
–64</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn97" symbol="97">
<label>
<sup>97</sup>
</label>
<p>The examples in this paragraph have all been taken from the articles on each composer in
<italic>The New Grove Dictionary</italic>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn98" symbol="98">
<label>
<sup>98</sup>
</label>
<p>For some examples relating to French institutions before 1550, see
<citation id="ref163" citation-type="thesis">
<name>
<surname>Bonime</surname>
<given-names>S.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘Anne de Bretagne (1477–1514) and Music: an Archival Study’ (Ph.D. dissertation,
<publisher-name>Bryn Mawr College</publisher-name>
,
<year>1975</year>
)</citation>
;
<citation id="ref164" citation-type="thesis">
<name>
<surname>Freedman</surname>
<given-names>R.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘Music, Musicians, and the House of Lorraine during the First Half of the Sixteenth Century’ (Ph.D. dissertation,
<publisher-name>University of Pennsylvania</publisher-name>
,
<year>1987</year>
)</citation>
;
<citation id="ref165" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Wright</surname>
<given-names>C.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Music and Ceremony at Notre Dame of Paris, 500–1550</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Cambridge</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1989</year>
)</citation>
; and
<citation id="ref166" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Robertson</surname>
<given-names>A. W.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>The Service-Books of the Royal Abbey of Saint-Denis</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Oxford</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1991</year>
)</citation>
. Comparable studies of the music associated with various French institutions in the second half of the sixteenth century have yet to be made.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn99" symbol="99">
<label>
<sup>99</sup>
</label>
<p>See
<citation id="ref167" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Brooks</surname>
<given-names>J.</given-names>
</name>
, ‘La comtesse de Retz et l'air de cour des années 1570’,
<source>Le concert des voix et des instruments à la Renaissance</source>
, ed.
<name>
<surname>Vaccaro</surname>
<given-names>J.-M.</given-names>
</name>
(
<publisher-loc>Paris</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1994</year>
)</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn100" symbol="100">
<label>
<sup>100</sup>
</label>
<p>
<citation id="ref168" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Bonnin</surname>
<given-names>T.</given-names>
</name>
and
<name>
<surname>Chassant</surname>
<given-names>A.</given-names>
</name>
,
<source>Puy de musique érigé à Evreux, en l'honneur de madame sainte Cecile</source>
(
<publisher-loc>Evreux</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1837</year>
)</citation>
.</p>
</fn>
<fn id="fn101" symbol="101">
<label>
<sup>101</sup>
</label>
<p>
<citation id="ref169" citation-type="book">
<name>
<surname>Jeffery</surname>
<given-names>B.</given-names>
</name>
, ed.,
<source>Chanson Verse of the Early Renaissance</source>
, 2 vols. (
<publisher-loc>London</publisher-loc>
,
<year>1971</year>
<year>1976</year>
)</citation>
, reprints in modern edition the contents of all such songbooks published up to the 1540s. A comparable edition of later songbooks, or at least a comprehensive study of such anthologies, would be an invaluable aid to study.</p>
</fn>
</fn-group>
</back>
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<title>Ut musica poesis: Music and Poetry in France in the Late Sixteenth Century</title>
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<title>Howard Mayer Brown</title>
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<titleInfo type="alternative" contentType="CDATA">
<title>Ut musica poesis: Music and Poetry in France in the Late Sixteenth Century</title>
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<namePart type="given">Howard Mayer</namePart>
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<affiliation>University of Chicago</affiliation>
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<abstract type="text-abstract">By praising rulers, whose magnificence formed a crucial part of the world order, Pierre de Ronsard and his French colleagues in the second half of the sixteenth century often depicted the world not as it was but as it ought to be. This idea informs Margaret McGowan's book on ideal forms in the age of Ronsard, in which she explores the ways poets and painters extolled the virtues and the theatrical magnificence of perfect princes following the Horatian dictum ut pictura poesis: as is painting so is poetry. McGowan demonstrates the virtuosity of the painters and poets of the sixteenth century in shaping their hymns of praise from the subject matter and ideals of ancient Greece and Rome by following Horace's advice to regard paintings as mute poems and poems as speaking pictures. McGowan shows how artists and intellectuals pursued their goals by creating four kinds of ideal form: iconic forms, sacred images derived from classical literary sources offering princes some guarantee of immortality; triumphal forms that evoke the heroic imperial past; ideal forms of beauty to be found in contemplating the beloved; and dancing forms that mirror rituals of celebration. McGowan claims that such ideal forms were intended to enlighten the ruler himself as much as they celebrated his grandeur in the eyes of others.</abstract>
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