Jean Courtois (composer) explained

Jean Courtois (fl. 15301545) was a composer of the Franco-Flemish School of the generation after Josquin des Prez. He was maitre de chapelle to the Archbishop of Cambrai in present-day France. His motet Venite populi terrae was written to celebrate Emperor Charles V and was performed in the Cathedral; the Emperor would have heard it in 1539 on his march to suppress the Revolt of Ghent.[1] [2] He wrote around 20 chansons, 15 motets, and 2 masses.[3] Courtois’ work exhibits the varied imitative procedures and shifting textural treatment which typify the Franco-Netherlandish motet style. The chansons, for 4 voices, are in the "Parisian" style of the day; the works for 5 or 6 voices are in the more contrapuntal "Netherlandish" style.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Jean Courtois Biography . Johnson . Keith . artistdirect.com . 20 December 2014 .
  2. Courtois, Jean . 1.13 . 411 . Hamilton . Mary Catherine . 1900. 1.
  3. The Harvard Biographical Dictionary of Music, edited by Don Michael Randel (Belknap Press, 1996), p. 182.