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Adrian Willaert

 
Music Encyclopedia: Adrian Willaert

(b Bruges/Roulaers, c1490; d Venice, 17 Dec 1562). Flemish composer. After studying law in Paris and music under Mouton, he was a singer in the service of Cardinal Ippolito I d′Este in 1515. In 1517 he accompanied Ippolito from Ferrara to Hungary, and in 1520 he transferred to the service of Duke Alfonso. In 1527 he was appointed maestro di cappella of St Mark s, Venice, where he remained for the rest of his life. He was one of the most influential teachers of his time, presiding over one of the major musical establishments of the period. Among his pupils were Rore, A. Gabrieli, Porta and Zarlino.

A prolific composer, he was one of the most versatile figures between the death of Josquin and the full maturity of Lassus and Palestrina. His output includes works in almost all genres of sacred music, French chansons, Italian madrigals and instrumental music.

His eight masses, mostly early works, are indebted to earlier composers, especially Josquin and Mouton. The six-voice Missa ‘Mente tota’, for example, is based on a motet by Josquin. In 1542 he published 23 polyphonic settings of hymns, followed, in 1550, by a more important and influential collection of polyphonic psalms for double chorus. His greatest and most enduring works are his numerous motets. About 173 of these survive and many were published during his lifetime. The four-voice ones embrace a wide range of liturgical categories, from antiphon and respond to settings of the Mass Proper, and the early ones exhibit a range of contrapuntal techniques. The five-voice ones are often addressed to patrons or celebrate contemporary events. Nearly all of the six-voice motets are late works which feature canonic structure, the abandonment of cantus firmi in favour of a pure contrapuntal-harmonic structure, excellent declamation and shifts in sonority.

His numerous chansons range in style from canonic four-voice works to works in a freer, more flexible manner, but he does not seem to have contributed to the outpouring of Parisian chansons during the 1520s and 1530s. He published his first madrigals in 1536 and belonged to the first generation of madrigalists, having a special relation to Verdelot. His madrigals cover the genre's range of expression; those of the Musica nova (1559) virtually originate the sonnet cycle as a large-scale vocal composition, in which the madrigal adopts the serious modes of expression previously reserved for the motet.

works:
Sacred music
  • 8 masses
  • over 50 hymns, psalms
  • over 170 motets
Secular music
  • c60 chansons
  • over 70 madrigals and other Italian settings
  • ricercares


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Biography: Adrian Willaert
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Adrian Willaert (ca. 1480-1562), a Franco-Flemish composer active in Italy, founded the Venetian school of composers.

It is supposed that Adrian Willaert was born in Bruges, and almost nothing is known of his earliest years. He was intended for the law and went to Paris for legal training but soon switched to music, becoming a student of Jean Mouton, a disciple of Josquin des Prez. After completing his musical studies, Willaert sojourned briefly in Rome and then entered the service of Duke Alfonso d'Este I at Ferrara (1522-1525). For the following three years (1525-1527) he was employed by the duke's brother, Ippolito d'Este II, Archbishop of Milan. Finally, in 1527, Willaert was named choir director of St. Mark's in Venice, and he retained this important post for his last 35 years, training many illustrious composers who constitute the Venetian school.

Willaert's works include all the major forms of his time, such as Masses, motets, madrigals, villanescas, and chansons. Among the secular genres, first place must go to the madrigals. Willaert grafted northern polyphony onto the simple Italian form, raising it to the artistic level of the imitative motet; at the same time he continued to write uncomplicated native forms such as the villanesca. His French chansons may be divided into two groups: melismatic, canonic, cantus-firmus pieces from his early years; and syllabic, text-oriented, and occasionally chromatic pieces reflecting the influence of the Italian madrigal.

Much more significant are the sacred works, as befitted the choirmaster of the second most important church in Italy. Most of his ten surviving Masses are "parodies", that is, elaborations of preexistent motets, madrigals, or chansons. Despite their beauty, they rank below the approximately 350 motets in which he carried forward, and even went beyond, the brilliant models of Josquin des Prez. The Latin texts of Willaert's motets included such diverse sources as the Aeneid of Virgil, devotional lyrics of contemporary poets, and the liturgical books of the Roman Catholic Church. The music of these masterful creations is filled with canons, thoroughgoing imitation, mild chromaticism, and polychoral writing.

Willaert's polychoral psalms of 1550 popularized this already known style of composition and influenced later composers such as Andrea and Giovanni Gabrieli to the degree that Willaert was credited until recently with the invention of chori spezzati, or scoring for two antiphonal choirs. His experiments with chromaticism influenced such students as Nicolo' Vicentino; and another pupil, Gioseffo Zarlino, derived from his polyphonic achievements the most complete analysis of 16th-century counterpoint.

Further Reading

For an analysis of Willaert's style see Alfred Einstein, The Italian Madrigal (3 vols., trans. 1949), and Gustave Reese, Music in the Renaissance (1954; rev. ed. 1959). The role of Willaert's music in Renaissance society is treated in Paul Henry Lang, Music in Western Civilization (1941).

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Adrian Willaert
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Willaert, Adrian (äd'rēän vĭl'ärt), c.1490-1562, Flemish composer. After brief engagements at Ferrara and Milan, he was choirmaster at St. Mark's, Venice, from 1527 until his death. Willaert was the founder of the Venetian school of composition. His polychoral settings of psalms and the Magnificat helped popularize this technique, and he and his followers were important in the development of the madrigal. Among his works are masses, motets, instrumental ricercari, and French and Italian secular songs.
Artist: Adriaan Willaert
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  • Born: 1490
  • Died: December 17, 1562
  • Genres: Classical

Biography

Willaert is among the most influential figures in musical history. He studied with Mouton and sang in the court of Cardinal Ippolito I d'Este. He apparently traveled with Ippolito to Hungary in 1517 after having served in Ferrara. By 1527 he was in service to St. Mark's in Venice. He stayed there the remainder of his life; though it was not one of the musical centers of Europe, Willaert's presence there helped to keep Venice artistically vital. He was "the" composer between Josquin and Palestrina and Lassus who prolifically composed in diverse genres including sacred music, French chansons and instrumental music. Of the masses which he composed, all of them early works, the influence of Josquin and Mouton are apparent. For example, "Mente tota" was a six-voiced mass composed for words by Josquin. Some of the publications for Willaert were the first publications devoted to a single musician. He published over twenty settings of hymns in polyphonic settings in 1542 and also wrote a collection of polyphonic psalms for true double choruses and an occasional antiphonal or responsorial composition, 1550. Over one hundred and seventy of his motets survive including four-voiced settings encompassing a comprehensive liturgical compass. Willaert employed five voices for commemorative events or for the celebration of his patrons and six voice motets were scored as canon often forsaking the cantus firmus. Chansons and madrigals were also among Willaert's compositions and he is considered to be one of the first if not the first madrigalist along with Verdelot with whom he had a close association. Among the many students whom Willaert taught were de Rore and Zarlino. ~ Keith Johnson, All Music Guide
Wikipedia: Adrian Willaert
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Adrian Willaert.

Adrian Willaert (c. 1490 – 7 December 1562) was a Flemish composer of the Renaissance and founder of the Venetian School. [1] He was one of the most representative members of the generation of northern composers who moved to Italy and transplanted the polyphonic Franco-Flemish style there. [2]

Contents

Life

He was probably born at Bruges, although a secondary source has suggested Roulers. According to his student, the renowned late 16th century music theorist Gioseffo Zarlino, Willaert went to Paris first to study law, but instead decided to study music. In Paris he met Jean Mouton, the principal composer of the French royal chapel and stylistic compatriot of Josquin des Prez, and studied with him.

Sometime around 1515 Willaert first went to Rome. An anecdote survives that indicates the musical ability of the young composer: Willaert was surprised to discover the choir of the papal chapel singing one of his own compositions, most likely the six-part motet Verbum bonum et suave, and even more surprised to learn that they thought it had been written by the much more famous composer Josquin. When he informed the singers of their error – that he was in fact the composer – they refused to sing it again. Indeed Willaert's early style is very similar to that of Josquin, with smooth polyphony, balanced voices and frequent use of imitation.

In July 1515, Willaert entered the service of Cardinal Ippolito I d'Este of Ferrara. Ippolito was a traveler, and Willaert likely accompanied him to various places, including Hungary, where he likely resided from 1517 to 1519. When Ippolito died in 1520, Willaert entered the service of Duke Alfonso of Ferrara. In 1522 Willaert had a post at the court chapel of Duke Alfonso; he remained there until 1525, at which time records show he was in the employ of Ippolito II d'Este in Milan.

Willaert's most significant appointment, and one of the most significant in the musical history of the Renaissance, was his selection as maestro di cappella of St. Mark's at Venice. Music had languished there under his predecessor, Pietro de Fossis, but that was shortly to change. The Venetian Doge Andrea Gritti had a rather large hand in Willaert’s appointment to the position of maestro di cappella at St. Mark’s. [3]

From his appointment in 1527 until his death in 1562, he retained the post at St. Mark's. [4] Composers came from all over Europe to study with him, and his standards were high both for singing and composition. During his previous employment with the dukes of Ferrara, he had acquired numerous contacts and influential friends elsewhere in Europe, including the Sforza family in Milan; doubtless this assisted in the spread of his reputation, and the consequent importation of musicians from foreign countries into northern Italy. In Ferrarese court documents, Willaert is referred to as "Adriano Cantore".[5] In addition to his output of sacred music as the director of St. Mark's, he wrote numerous madrigals, a secular form; he is considered a Flemish madrigal composer of the first rank. [6]

Musical style and influence

Willaert was one of the most versatile composers of the Renaissance, writing music in almost every extant style and form. In force of personality, and with his central position as maestro di cappella at St. Mark's, he became the most influential musician in Europe between the death of Josquin and the time of Palestrina. [7] Some of Willaert’s motets and chanzoni franciose a quarto sopra doi (double canonic chansons) had been published as early as 1520 in Venice. [8] Willaert owes much of his fame in sacred music to his motets. [9] According to Gioseffo Zarlino, writing later in the 16th century, Willaert was the inventor of the antiphonal style from which the polychoral style of the Venetian school evolved. As there were two choir lofts, one of each side of the main altar of St. Mark's, both provided with an organ, Willaert divided the choral body into two sections, using them either antiphonally or simultaneously. Rore, Zarilino, Andrea Gabrieli, Donato, and Croce, Willaert’s successors, all cultivated this style. [10] The tradition of writing that Willaert established during his time at St. Mark’s was continued by other composers working there throughout the 1600s. [3] He then composed and performed psalms and other works for two alternating choirs. This innovation met with instantaneous success and strongly influenced the development of the new method. [11] In Venice, a compositional style, established by Willaert, for multiple choirs dominated. [12] In 1550 he published Salmi spezzati, antiphonal settings of the psalms, the first polychoral work of the Venetian school. Willaert’s work in the religious genre established Flemish techniques firmly as an important part of the Italian Style. [13] While more recent research has shown that Willaert was not the first to use this antiphonal, or polychoral method — Dominique Phinot had employed it before Willaert, and Johannes Martini even used it in the late 15th century — Willaert's polychoral settings were the first to become famous and widely imitated. [14]

With his contemporaries, Willaert developed the canzone (a form of polyphonic secular song) and ricercare which were vital forerunners of modern instrumental forms. [15] Willaert also arranged 22 four-part madrigals for voice and lute written by Verdelot. [16] Willaert was the first to extensively use chromaticism in the madrigal. [17] Looking forward, we are given an image of early word-painting in his motet Mentre che’l cor. [18] Willaert, who was fond of the older compositional techniques such as the canon, often placed the melody in the tenor of his compositions, treating it as a cantus firmus. [19] Willaert, with the help of de Rore, standardized a five-voice setting in madrigal composition. [20] Willaert also pioneered a style that continued until the end of the madrigal period of reflecting the emotional qualities of the text and the meanings of important words as sharply and clearly as possible. [17]

Willaert was no less distinguished as a teacher than as a composer. [21] Among his disciples are: Cipriano de Rore, his successor at St. Mark's; Costanzo Porta; Francesco Dalla Viola; Gioseffo Zarlino; and Andrea Gabrieli. Another one influenced by Willaert was Lassus. [6] These composers, except for Lassus, formed the core of what came to be known as the Venetian school, which was decisively influential on the stylistic change that marked the beginning of the Baroque era. Among Willaert's pupils in Venice, one of the most prominent was Cipriano de Rore from the Low Countries (possibly Antwerp). [22] The Venetian school flourished for 150 years in the hands of the Gabrielis and others.[23] Willaert also probably influenced a young Palestrina. [6] Willaert left a large number of compositions — 8 masses, over 50 hymns and psalms, over 150 motets, about 60 French chansons, over 70 Italian madrigals and several instrumental (ricercares).

Media

WILLAERT Le dur travail.mid Le dur travail

Recording

  • 1993 - Renaissance-polyfonie in Brugge. The Songbook of Zeghere van Male. Capilla Flamenca. Eufoda 1155. Contains a recording of Mon petit cueur by Adriaen Willaert.
  • 2003 - Canticum Canticorum. In Praise of Love: The Song of Songs in the Renaissance. Capilla Flamenca. Eufoda 1359. Contains a recording of Ave regina caelorum by Adriaen Willaert.

References and further reading

  • Article "Adrian Willaert," in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, ed. Stanley Sadie. 20 vol. London, Macmillan Publishers Ltd., 1980. ISBN 1-56159-174-2
  • Gustave Reese, Music in the Renaissance. New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1954. ISBN 0-393-09530-4
  • Harold Gleason and Warren Becker, Music in the Middle Ages and Renaissance (Music Literature Outlines Series I). Bloomington, Indiana. Frangipani Press, 1986. ISBN 0-89917-034-X

Notes

  1. ^ Miller, Hugh M. (1972). History of Music. New York. p. 53. 
  2. ^ Reese, Gustave (1959). Music in the Renaissance. New York. pp. 370–371. 
  3. ^ a b Fenlon, Iain, ed (1989). The Renaissance From the 1470s to the end of the 16th century. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice Hall. pp. 111–112. 
  4. ^ World of Music An Illustrated Encyclopedia. 4. New York: Abradale Press. 1963. p. 1484. 
  5. ^ Lewis Lockwood, Giulio Lockwood. "Adrian Willaert 1. Early career and Ferrarese service.", Grove Music Online, ed. L. Macy (accessed September 29, 2006), grovemusic.com (subscription access).
  6. ^ a b c Wooldridge, H. E. (1973). The Oxford History of Music. 2. New York. p. 197. 
  7. ^ Reese, Gustave (1959). Music in the Renaissance. New York. p. 348. 
  8. ^ Abraham, Gerald (1917). The Concise Oxford History of Music. Oxford. p. 230. 
  9. ^ Reese, Gustave (1959). Music in the Renaissance. New York. p. 371. 
  10. ^ Einstein, Alfred (1965). A Short History of Music. New York. p. 67. 
  11. ^ World of Music An Illustrated Encyclopedia. 4. New York: Abradale Press. 1963. p. 1484. 
  12. ^ Einstein, Alfred (1965). A Short History of Music. New York. p. 67. 
  13. ^ Robertson, Alec; Stevens, Denis, eds (1965). A History of Music. 2. New York. p. 160. 
  14. ^ Fenlon, Iain, ed (1989). The Renaissance From the 1470s to the end of the 16th century. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice Hall. p. 114. 
  15. ^ World of Music An Illustrated Encyclopedia. 4. New York: Abradale Press. 1963. p. 1485. 
  16. ^ Abraham, Gerald (1917). The Concise Oxford History of Music. Oxford. pp. 228–229. 
  17. ^ a b Robertson, Alec; Stevens, Denis, eds (1965). A History of Music. 2. New York. p. 149. 
  18. ^ Reese, Gustave (1959). Music in the Renaissance. New York. p. 324. 
  19. ^ Ulrich, Homer; Pisk, Paul A. (1963). A History of Music and Musical Style. New York. p. 177. 
  20. ^ Ulrich, Homer; Pisk, Paul A. (1963). A History of Music and Musical Style. New York. p. 177. 
  21. ^ Reese, Gustave (1959). Music in the Renaissance. New York. p. 371. 
  22. ^ Reese, Gustave (1959). Music in the Renaissance. New York. p. 310. 
  23. ^ World of Music An Illustrated Encyclopedia. 4. New York: Abradale Press. 1963. p. 1484. 

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Music Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Music. Copyright © 1994 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
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Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Adrian Willaert" Read more