Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

chanson

 
Dictionary: chan·son   (shäN-sôN') pronunciation
 
n., pl. -sons (-sôN', -sôNz').

A song, especially a French one.

[French, from Old French, from Latin cantiō, cantiōn-, from cantus, past participle of cantāre, to sing. See chant.]


Search unanswered questions...
Enter a word or phrase...
All Community Q&A Reference topics
 
Music Encyclopedia: Chanson
Top

(Fr. : ‘song’)

A lyric composition to French words; more specifically, a French polyphonic song of the late Middle Ages and Renaissance.

The first important chanson composer was Machaut, who may have invented the treble-dominated type of song in two, three or four parts, with its rhythmically irregular, decorated melodic lines. Machaut's chansons were succeeded by those of two overlapping generations: a ‘mannerist’ group delighting in rhythmic and notational complexity and a younger group whose simpler songs foreshadowed those of the early 15th-century Burgundian school, represented at its best by Dufay and Binchois. In their chansons the poems are mostly about chivalric love, and the music refines the treble-dominated three-part textures of earlier generations. Later in the century the chansons of Busnois and Ockeghem weld the three voices into a more homogeneous texture. About a third of those by Busnois are in four parts, which by c 1500 became standard.

Towards the end of the 15th century a generation of Franco-Netherlands musicians, including Josquin and Obrecht, brought to the chanson a new technique of imitative counterpoint applied to equal but independent melodic lines. Not all composers were as ready as Josquin, however, to abandon the standard types or formes fixes (ballade, rondeau, virelai) and set the popular poems that circulated widely throughout France.

The so-called Parisian chanson of the 1530s and 1540s, as represented in the publications of Attaingnant and the songs of Sermisy and Janequin, were more varied in subject matter and in musical style, which tended more towards simple chordal textures. Sermisy excelled in sophisticated love-songs, Janequin in expressing a vivacious French spirit and in his long, descriptive chansons. After 1550 chanson composers such as Arcadelt, Lassus and Le Jeune were increasingly influenced by the Italian madrigal, but the simpler type, strophic and with the voices predominantly in the same rhythm, flourished as the ‘voix de ville’ or ‘vaudeville’. The chanson spirituelle, a secular piece with moralistic or sacred words, reflected the religious conflicts in late 16th-century France.



 
Literary Dictionary: chanson
Top

chanson [shahn‐son], the French word for a song, also applied specifically to the kind of love song composed by the Provençal troubadours of the late Middle Ages. This usually has five or six matching stanzas and a concluding envoi (or half‐stanza), and its subject is courtly love. The metres and rhyme schemes vary greatly, as the form was seen as a test of technical skills. See also canzone.

 

French art song. The unaccompanied chanson for a single voice part, composed by the troubadours and later the trouvères, first appeared in the 12th century. Accompanied chansons, with parts for one or more instruments, were written in the 14th – 15th centuries by Guillaume de Machaut and others in the strict formes fixes ("fixed forms"). About 1,500 chansons for several voices began to be written by Josquin des Prez and his contemporaries. In recent centuries the term has often been used for any cabaret-style French song.

For more information on chanson, visit Britannica.com.

 
Music: Chanson
Top

A song, usually secular. This term isusually applied to works composed during the Medieval and Renaissance periods, though many twentieth-century composers have also applied the term to their own works.

 
Wikipedia: Chanson
Top

A chanson (French pronunciation: [ʃãsɔ̃], "song", from Latin cantio) is in general any lyric-driven French song, usually polyphonic and secular. A singer specializing in chansons is known as a "chanteur"; a collection of chansons, especially from the late Middle Ages and Renaissance, is also known as a chansonnier.

Contents

Chanson de geste

The earliest chansons were the epic poems performed to simple monophonic melodies by a professional class of jongleurs or ménestrels. These usually recounted the famous deeds (geste) of past heroes, legendary and semi-historical. The Song of Roland is the most famous of these, but in general the chanson de geste are studied as literature since very little of their music survives.

See also chanson de toile.

Chanson courtoise

The chanson courtoise or grand chant was an early form of monophonic chanson, the chief lyric poetic genre of the trouvères. It was an adaptation to Old French of the Occitan canso. It was practiced in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. Thematically, as its name implies, it was a song of courtly love, written usually by a man to his noble lover. Some later chansons were polyphonic and some had refrains and were called chansons avec des refrains. A Crusade song was known as a chanson de croisade.

Burgundian chanson

In its typical specialised usage, the word chanson refers to a polyphonic French song of the late Middle Ages and Renaissance. Early chansons tended to be in one of the formes fixesballade, rondeau or virelai (formerly the chanson baladée)—though some composers later set popular poetry in a variety of forms. The earliest chansons were for two, three or four voices, with first three becoming the norm, expanding to four voices by the sixteenth century. Sometimes, the singers were accompanied by instruments.

The first important composer of chansons was Guillaume de Machaut, who composed three-voice works in the formes fixes during the 14th century. Guillaume Dufay and Gilles Binchois, who wrote so-called Burgundian chansons (because they were from the area known as Burgundy), were the most important chanson composers of the next generation (c. 1420-1470). Their chansons somewhat simple in style, are also generally in three voices with a structural tenor.

Parisian chanson

Later 15th- and early 16th-century figures in the genre included Johannes Ockeghem and Josquin Desprez, whose works cease to be constrained by formes fixes and begin to feature a similar pervading imitation to that found in contemporary motets and liturgical music. At mid-century, Claudin de Sermisy and Clément Janequin were composers of so-called Parisian chansons, which also abandoned the formes fixes and were in a simpler, more homophonic style, sometimes featuring music that was meant to be evocative of certain imagery. Many of these Parisian works were published by Pierre Attaingnant. Composers of their generation, as well as later composers, such as Orlando de Lassus, were influenced by the Italian madrigal. Many early instrumental works were ornamented variations (diminutions) on chansons, with this genre becoming the canzone, a progenitor of the sonata.

The first book of sheet music printed from movable type was Harmonice Musices Odhecaton, a collection of ninety-six chansons by many composers, published in Venice in 1501 by Ottaviano Petrucci.

See also chanson spirituelle.

Modern chanson

French solo song developed in the late 16th century, probably from the aforementioned Parisian works. During the 17th century, the air de cour, chanson pour boire, and other like genres, generally accompanied by lute or keyboard, flourished, with contributions by such composers as Antoine Boesset, Denis Gaultier, Michel Lambert, and Michel-Richard de Lalande.

During the 18th century, vocal music in France was dominated by Opera, but solo song underwent a Renaissance in the 19th, first with salon melodies, but by mid-century with highly sophisticated works influenced by the German Lieder which had been introduced into the country. Louis Niedermeyer, under the particular spell of Schubert was a pivotal figure in this movement, followed by Édouard Lalo, Felicien David, and many others.

Another off-shoot of chanson called chanson réaliste (realist song), was a popular musical genre in France, primarily from the 1880s until the end of World War II.[1][2] Born of the cafés-concerts and cabarets of the Montmartre district of Paris and influenced by literary realism and the naturalist movements in literature and theatre, chanson réaliste was a musical style that was mainly performed by women and which dealt with the lives of Paris's poor and working-class.[1][3][4] Some of the more commonly known performers of the genre include Damia, Fréhel and Édith Piaf.

Later 19th-century composers of French song, called either mélodie or chanson, included Ernest Chausson, Emmanuel Chabrier, Gabriel Fauré, and Claude Debussy, while many 20th-century French composers have continued this strong tradition.

Chansons today

In France today "chanson" often refers to the work of more popular singers like Jacques Brel, Georges Brassens, Édith Piaf, Charles Aznavour, Barbara, Léo Ferré, Serge Gainsbourg, etc. Chanson is distinguished from the rest of French "pop" music by following the rhythm of the French language, rather than that of English, and thus is identifiable as specifically French.

See also

References

  • Brown, Howard Mayer, et al. "Chanson." In Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online.
  • Dobbins, Frank. "Chanson." In The Oxford Companion to Music, edited by Alison Latham. Oxford Music Online.
  • Grout, Donald Jay, and Palisca, Claude V. (2001). A History of Western Music, 6th ed. New York: W. W. Norton & Co. ISBN 0 393 97527 4.
  1. ^ a b Sweeney, Regina M. (2001). Singing Our Way to Victory: French Cultural Politics and Music During the Great War, Wesleyan University Press. p. 23. ISBN 0819564737.
  2. ^ Fagot, Sylvain & Uzel, Jean-Philippe (2006). Énonciation artistique et socialité: actes du colloque international de Montréal des 3 et 4 mars 2005, L'Harmattan. pp. 200-203. ISBN 2296001769. (French text)
  3. ^ Wilson, Elizabeth (1992). The Sphinx in the City: Urban Life, the Control of Disorder, and Women, University of California Press. p. 62. ISBN 0520078640
  4. ^ Conway, Kelly (2004). Chanteuse in the City: The Realist Singer in French Film. University of California Press. p. 6. ISBN 0520244079

 
Shopping: chanson
Top
 
 

 

Copyrights:

Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Music Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Music. Copyright © 1994 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
Literary Dictionary. The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Literary Terms. Copyright © Chris Baldick 2001, 2004. All rights reserved.  Read more
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Music. © 2003 The Austin Symphony. All Rights Reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Chanson" Read more