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Music and Art in Josquin's Age: Branching Out

Donald Macleod is back at the National Gallery with Andrew Graham-Dixon to consider how Josquin and the painters of northern Europe were extending their influence.

Donald Macleod is back at the National Gallery with Andrew Graham-Dixon to consider how Josquin and the painters of Northern Europe were extending their influence.

The humanist Cosimo Bartoli described Josquin as the Michelangelo of Music. A master of polyphonic choral writing, Josquin was as widely admired in his own lifetime as posthumously. While Josquin was a dominant force in music, the Franco-Flemish area with which he鈥檚 associated, also produced some remarkable painters, who, like Josquin and his fellow composers, exported their style, technical accomplishments and influence across Europe. In a series to mark the 500th anniversary of Josquin鈥檚 death, Donald Macleod visits the National Gallery in Trafalgar Square with art historian Andrew Graham-Dixon, to build a picture of Josquin鈥檚 music and the places he lived and worked, which also stimulated painters to produce equally outstanding Art. To accompany the series the paintings they discuss can be viewed on the Radio 3 website.

Considering his fame, it鈥檚 surprisingly difficult to map Josquin鈥檚 life. His birthdate was possibly 1450 or perhaps 1455 and it鈥檚 thought he was a choirboy at the collegiate church of St. G茅ry in Cambrai. Documents show he died in 1521, by which time he was probably in his seventies. He spent his last years as provost of the Collegiate church of Notre Dame in Cond茅 sur l鈥橢scaut, a town near Saint Quentin, right on the border with what鈥檚 now Belgium. In between times, Josquin may have had an association with the royal courts of King Ren茅 in Aix-en-Provence and Louis XI of France, before working for the influential Sforza family in Milan and becoming the first maestro di cappella for Ercole d鈥橢ste in Ferrara.

As Josquin progresses from church musician to employment at a royal establishment, Donald Macleod and Andrew Graham-Dixon return to the National Gallery to see how painters from Northern Europe were extending their spheres of influence. The paintings they talk about are available on the Radio 3 website.

La Bernardina
Cantica Symphonia
Giuseppe Maletto, director

Guillaume se va chaufer
Capilla Flamenca

O bone et dulcissime Jesu
La Chapelle Royale
Philippe Herreweghe, director

Illibata dei virgo nutrix
The Clerks
Edward Wickham, director

Memor esto verbi tui, 鈥淧salm 118鈥
Bremen Weser-Renaissance
Manfred Cordes, director

Que vous madame
Taverner Consort
Andrew Parrott, director

Petite camusette
Baises moy ma doulce鈥檃mye
Dominique Visse, counter-tenor
Ensemble Cl茅ment Janequin

59 minutes

Music Played

  • Josquin des Prez

    La Bernardina

    Ensemble: Cantica Symphonia.
    • GLOSSA : GCDP-31909.
    • GLOSSA.
    • 4.
  • Josquin des Prez

    Guillaume se va chaufer

    Ensemble: Capilla Flamenca.
    • NAXOS : 8.-554516.
    • NAXOS.
    • 15.
  • Josquin des Prez

    O bone et dulcissime Jesu

    Ensemble: La Chapelle Royale. Conductor: Philippe Herreweghe.
    • HARMONIA MUNDI : HMA 1951243.
    • HARMONIA MUNDI.
    • 5.
  • Josquin des Prez

    Illibata dei virgo nutrix

    Choir: The Clerks. Director: Edward Wickham.
    • GAUDEAMUS CDGAM361.
    • GAUDEAMUS.
    • 4.
  • Josquin des Prez

    Memor esto verbi tui, "Psalm 118"

    Ensemble: Weser-Renaissance Bremen. Conductor: Manfred Cordes.
    • CPO : 777588-2.
    • CPO.
    • 5.
  • Josquin des Prez

    Que vous madame

    Ensemble: Taverner Consort. Conductor: Andrew Parrott.
    • WARNER CLASSICS : 9029659823.
    • WARNER CLASSICS.
    • 5.
  • Josquin des Prez

    Petite camusette

    Ensemble: Clement Janequin Ensemble. Singer: Dominique Visse.
    • RICERCAR : RIC 423.
    • RICERCAR.
    • 8.
  • Josquin des Prez

    Baises moy ma doulce'amye

    Singer: Dominique Visse. Ensemble: Clement Janequin Ensemble.
    • RICERCAR : RIC 423.
    • RICERCAR.
    • 13.

Broadcast

  • Tue 31 Aug 2021 12:00

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