medieval troubadours worked for aubrey drake graham.I hear they help Nicki Minaj compose songs!That's who they work for!Oh!They also work for Michael Jackson to help them sing nun songs!But after it was funny when they started singing hip hop!Everyone laughed!That's who they work for!HAPPY?
How were troubadours important for the development of music in the middle ages How did jongleurs support troubadours What were the differences between troubadours, trouveres, and minnesingers as a result of location
Minnesingers were similar to troubadours, being poet-musicians in medieval Europe who composed and performed songs about courtly love. They were popular in German-speaking regions from the 12th to 14th centuries and shared a focus on themes of chivalry and romance with troubadours.
Fredric L. Cheyette has written: 'Ermengard of Narbonne and the World of the Troubadours (Conjunctions of Religion and Power in the Medieval Past)' 'Ermengard of Narbonne and the world of the troubadours' -- subject(s): Biography, History, Kings and rulers, Troubadours
Troubadours in southern France, trouveres in northern France, minnesingers in Germany.
Troubadours were itinerant poets and musicians in the medieval Occitan-speaking regions of France, active from the 11th to the 13th centuries. They composed and performed lyrical poetry, often focusing on themes of chivalry, courtly love, and nature, usually accompanied by instruments like the lute. Troubadours often traveled between courts, entertaining nobility and spreading their art, while some were patrons of their work, sponsoring specific troubadours to enhance their cultural prestige. Their lyrical forms and melodies laid the groundwork for later developments in European music and poetry.
Troubadours were said to not be seen often, and nobody really knows what they looked like. It seems that they used to wear semi-fancy clothing and feathered hats, carrying their instruments.
J. J. Wilhelm has written: 'Medieval song' 'Seven troubadours'
Medieval troubadours were poet-composers who served patrons at courts of the nobility. They were of many social classes, but mostly of the noble class. They sometimes performed their own compositions, but often employed joglars to perform for them. Their songs covered a variety of topics from love to politics and debate. Their songs were orally circulated, but they were NOT folk musicians, they wrote for the upper class. They may have wandered, but not aimlessly; from court to court, looking for a patron. Modern troubadours usually identify themselves with the folk movement, and believe that the roots of medieval traditions are found in folk, the music of the people. They are usually wandering, disenfranchised persons who have an important message to share through the medium of music. They are similar to the medieval troubadours in that the text and the music are of equal importance to them.
well, actually they could live anywhere. But mainly they didn't have permanent settlement. Troubadours traveled constantly to play for different crowds all around their continent (very rarely away from their continent).
Hunting, feasts, embroidery, hawking, talking, troubadours, jesters, reading, playing an instrument, sex, drinking
The Troubadours was created in 2004.
Troubadours and trouvères were medieval poet-musicians from the Occitan and Old French-speaking regions, respectively, who composed and performed lyric poetry, often focusing on themes of chivalry and courtly love. Troubadours were active primarily in the 11th to 13th centuries in southern France, while trouvères emerged in the northern regions around the same time. Jogleurs, on the other hand, were itinerant performers who often accompanied the troubadours and trouvères, entertaining audiences with songs, stories, and acrobatics, but were generally not associated with the same literary sophistication. Together, these figures played a vital role in the cultural landscape of medieval Europe.