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Guillaume Du Fay information


Du Fay (left) beside a portative organ, with Gilles Binchois (right) holding a small harp in a miniature from before 1451.[1] See § Portraits

Guillaume Du Fay (/djˈf/ dyoo-FEYE, French: [dy fa(j)i]; also Dufay, Du Fayt; 5 August 1397(?)[2] – 27 November 1474) was a composer and music theorist of early Renaissance music, who is variously described as French or Franco-Flemish. Considered the leading European composer of his time, his music was widely performed and reproduced.[3] Du Fay was well-associated with composers of the Burgundian School, particularly his colleague Gilles Binchois, but was never a regular member of the Burgundian chapel himself.[4][5]

While he is among the best-documented composers of his time, Du Fay's birth and family is shrouded with uncertainty, though he was probably the illegitimate child of a priest. He was educated at Cambrai Cathedral, where his teachers included Nicolas Grenon and Richard Loqueville, among others. For the next decade, Du Fay worked throughout Europe: as a subdeacon in Cambrai, under Carlo I Malatesta in Rimini, for the House of Malatesta in Pesaro, and under Louis Aleman in Bologna, where he was ordained priest. As his fame began to spread, he settled in Rome in 1428 as musician of the prestigious papal choir, first under Pope Martin V and then Pope Eugene IV, where he wrote the motets Balsamus et munda cera, Ecclesie militantis and Supremum est mortalibus. Amid Rome's finical and political disorder in the 1430s, Du Fay took a leave of absence from the choir to serve Amadeus VIII, Duke of Savoy.

Du Fay returned to Italy in 1436, writing his most admired work, the complex motet Nuper Rosarum Flores, which celebrated the consecration of Filippo Brunelleschi's dome for the Florence Cathedral. He later joined the recently-moved papal court in Bologna, and was associated with the House of Este in Ferrara. For the next eleven years, Du Fay was in Cambrai serving Philip the Good, under whom he may have written now-lost works on music theory. After a brief return to both Savoy and Italy, Du Fay settled in Cambrai in 1458, where his focus shifted from song and motet, to composing English-inspired cyclic masses based on cantus firmus, such as the Missa Ave regina celorum, the Missa Ecce ancilla Domini, the Missa L'Homme armé and the Missa Se la face ay pale. During his final years in Cambrai, Du Fay wrote his now-lost requiem and both met and influenced the leading musicians of his time, including Antoine Busnois, Loyset Compère, Johannes Tinctoris and particularly, Johannes Ockeghem.

Du Fay has been described as leading the first generation of European musicians who were primarily considered 'composers' by occupation. His erratic career took him throughout Western Europe, forming a 'cosmopolitan style' and an extensive oeuvre which included representatives of virtually every polyphonic genre of his time.[3] Like Binchois, Du Fay was deeply influenced by the contenance angloise style of John Dunstaple, and synthesized it with a wide variety of other styles, including that of the famous Missa Caput, and the techniques of his younger contemporaries, Ockeghem and Busnois.[6]

  1. ^ Gülke 2003, p. II.
  2. ^ Fenlon 2009, pp. 122–124.
  3. ^ a b Planchart 2004.
  4. ^ Britannica 2016.
  5. ^ Pryer & Fallows 2011, § Introduction.
  6. ^ Planchart 2004, §2 "Posthumous reputation".

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Guillaume Du Fay

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Guillaume Du Fay (/djuːˈfaɪ/ dyoo-FEYE, French: [dy fa(j)i]; also Dufay, Du Fayt; 5 August 1397(?) – 27 November 1474) was a composer and music theorist...

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Gilles Binchois

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central figure of the Burgundian School, Binchois and his colleague Guillaume Du Fay were deeply influenced by the contenance angloise style of John Dunstaple...

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Renaissance music

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roughly subdivided, with an early period corresponding to the career of Guillaume Du Fay (c. 1397–1474) and the cultivation of cantilena style, a middle dominated...

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Johannes Ockeghem

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Ockeghem was the most influential European composer in the period between Guillaume Du Fay and Josquin des Prez, and he was—with his colleague Antoine Busnois—the...

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French Renaissance

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music such as the chanson, lightness, singability, and popularity. Guillaume Du Fay and Gilles Binchois are two notable examples from the Burgundian school...

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Tota pulchra es

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include Robert Schumann, Anton Bruckner, Pablo Casals, Maurice Duruflé, Guillaume du Fay,[citation needed] Grzegorz Gerwazy Gorczycki, Heinrich Isaac, James...

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Josquin des Prez

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music of 16th-century Europe. Building on the work of his predecessors Guillaume Du Fay and Johannes Ockeghem, he developed a complex style of expressive—and...

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1470s in music

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notable events in music that took place in the 1470s. 1470 5 August – Guillaume Du Fay purchases some land in his homeland of Beersel to provide an income...

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Fermata

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appears as early as the 15th century. It is quite common in the works of Guillaume Du Fay and Josquin des Prez. In chorales by Johann Sebastian Bach and other...

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Music

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interwoven simultaneously. Prominent composers from this era include Guillaume Du Fay, Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina, Thomas Morley, Orlando di Lasso...

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Antoine Busnois

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renowned 15th-century composers of secular polyphonic chansons. Between Guillaume Du Fay and Claudin de Sermisy, Busnois was the most prolific and important...

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Ave Regina caelorum

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set to polyphonic music by composers such as Leonel Power (d. 1445), Guillaume Du Fay (d. 1474), Tomás Luis de Victoria (1548-1611), Marc-Antoine Charpentier...

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Music for the Requiem Mass

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surviving polyphonic setting. There was a setting by the elder composer Guillaume Du Fay, possibly earlier, which is now lost: Ockeghem's may have been modelled...

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Nuper rosarum flores

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Flowers of Roses/The Rose Blossoms Recently"), is a motet composed by Guillaume Dufay for the 25 March 1436 consecration of the Florence Cathedral, on...

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Chanson

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was Guillaume de Machaut, who composed three-voice works in the formes fixes during the 14th century. Two composers from Burgundy, Guillaume Du Fay and...

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Lamentatio sanctae matris ecclesiae Constantinopolitanae

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Mother Church of Constantinople') is a motet by the Renaissance composer Guillaume Dufay. Its topic is a lament of the fall of Constantinople to the Ottoman...

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Motet

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Halle (1237?–1288? or after 1306) Johannes Ciconia (c. 1370–1412) Guillaume Du Fay (1397-1474) John Dunstaple (c. 1390–1453) Franco of Cologne (fl. mid-13th...

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Early modern period

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Rubens of the Flemish Baroque traditions. Famous composers included Guillaume Du Fay, Heinrich Isaac, Josquin des Prez, Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina...

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Missa Caput

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ramifications in music history. Among the many composers influenced by it are Guillaume Du Fay and Johannes Ockeghem. The cantus firmus on which the mass is based...

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Richard Loqueville

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students included Edward III, Duke of Bar and the influential composer Guillaume Du Fay. Little is known of Loqueville's life. A trained harpist, he taught...

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American Institute of Musicology

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amount of composers, most notably the complete works of Guillaume de Machaut and Guillaume Du Fay, among many others. The CSM, which focuses on music theory...

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Arnold de Lantins

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2010. (subscription required) Planchart, Alejandro. L. Macy (ed.). Guillaume Du Fay. Grove Music Online. Retrieved 29 October 2010. (subscription required)...

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Classical music

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Palestrina, John Dunstaple, Johannes Ockeghem, Orlande de Lassus, Guillaume Du Fay, Gilles Binchois, Thomas Tallis, William Byrd, Giovanni Gabrieli, Carlo...

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List of variations on a theme by another composer

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variations sur le "Choeur des Grecs" du Siège de Corinthe, Op. 36 Grandes variations sur une marche favorite de Guillaume Tell, Op. 50 (piano 4-hands) Variations...

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Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina

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dominance in Italy primarily to two influential Netherlandish composers, Guillaume Du Fay and Josquin des Prez, who had spent significant portions of their careers...

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Burgundian State

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were the leading composers in the mid-15th century Europe, such as Guillaume Du Fay, Gilles Binchois and Antoine Busnois. Burgundian territories were roughly...

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Buxheim Organ Book

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but some are also known composers of the time (e.g. John Dunstable, Guillaume Du Fay, Gilles Binchois, Walter Frye, Conrad Paumann). In addition to arrangements...

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