Guillaume Costeley
ronounced Cotelay(1530, possibly 1531 – 28 January 1606) was a French composer of the
Renaissance
The Renaissance ( , ) , from , with the same meanings. is a period in European history marking the transition from the Middle Ages to modernity and covering the 15th and 16th centuries, characterized by an effort to revive and surpass ideas ...
. He was the court
organist
An organist is a musician who plays any type of organ (music), organ. An organist may play organ repertoire, solo organ works, play with an musical ensemble, ensemble or orchestra, or accompany one or more singers or instrumentalist, instrumental ...
to
Charles IX of France
Charles IX (Charles Maximilien; 27 June 1550 – 30 May 1574) was King of France from 1560 until his death in 1574. He ascended the French throne upon the death of his brother Francis II in 1560, and as such was the penultimate monarch of the ...
and famous for his numerous ''
chanson
A (, , french: chanson française, link=no, ; ) is generally any lyric-driven French song, though it most often refers to the secular polyphonic French songs of late medieval and Renaissance music. The genre had origins in the monophonic s ...
s'', which were representative of the late development of the form; his work in this regard was part of the early development of the style known as
musique mesurée. He was also one of very few 16th century French composers of music for keyboard. In addition, he was a founding member of the ''
Académie de Poésie et de Musique The Académie de Poésie et de Musique (french: Académie de poésie et de musique), later renamed the Académie du Palais, was the first Academy in France. It was founded in 1570 under the auspices of Charles IX of France by the poet Jean-Antoine ...
'' along with poet
Jean-Antoine de Baïf
Jean Antoine de Baïf (; 19 February 1532 – 19 September 1589) was a French poet and member of the '' Pléiade''.
Life
Jean Antoine de Baïf was born in Venice, the natural son of the scholar Lazare de Baïf, who was at that time French amb ...
, and he was one of the earliest composers to experiment with
microtonal
Microtonal music or microtonality is the use in music of microtones—intervals smaller than a semitone, also called "microintervals". It may also be extended to include any music using intervals not found in the customary Western tuning of tw ...
composition.
Life
Costeley was born in
Fontanges-en-Auvergne, coincidentally the same town as contemporary composer
Antoine de Bertrand
Antoine de Bertrand (also Anthoine) (1530/1540 – probably 1581) was a French composer of the Renaissance. Early in his life he was a prolific composer of secular chansons, and late in his life he wrote hymns and canticles, under the influence of ...
. Nothing is known of him prior to his arrival in Paris in or before 1554, at which time he met, and became acquainted with the music of, such diverse figures as
Jean Maillard
Jean Maillard (c. 1515 – after 1570) was a French composer of the Renaissance.
While little is known with certainty about his life, he may have been associated with the French royal court, since he wrote at least one motet for them. Most li ...
,
Jacques Arcadelt
Jacques Arcadelt (also Jacob Arcadelt; 14 October 1568) was a Franco-Flemish composer of the Renaissance, active in both Italy and France, and principally known as a composer of secular vocal music. Although he also wrote sacred vocal music, he wa ...
, and
Sandrin
Sandrin (Pierre Regnault) (c. 1490 – after 1561) was a French composer of the Renaissance. He was a prolific composer of chansons in the middle of the 16th century, some of which were extremely popular and widely distributed.
Life
He was ...
. It was through Sandrin, who had recently worked in Italy, that Costeley probably became interested in the latest trends in Italian scholarship, particularly the theories of
Nicola Vicentino
Nicola Vicentino (1511 – 1575 or 1576) was an Italian music theorist and composer of the Renaissance. He was one of the most progressive musicians of the age, inventing, among other things, a microtonal keyboard.
Life
Little is known of hi ...
, some of which involved composition using
microtones. Costeley's only microtonal composition, ''Seigneur Dieu ta pitié'', was apparently written at exactly the time that Sandrin was in Paris.
During the late 1550s Costeley rose in prominence in Parisian musical life, being published by
Le Roy and
Ballard in 1559. Since Le Roy was closely connected to the royal court through the family of
Catherine de Clermont, who was to become the
Countess of Retz, it is probable that his influence was significant in Costeley's rise. By 1560 Costeley had been appointed to the royal court, as organist, music teacher to the ten-year-old monarch, and composer of chansons for the royal chamber.
In 1570 he published ''Musique de Guillaume Costeley'', which contains almost all of his surviving works. In November of this same year King
Henry III granted a charter for the formation of the
Académie de poésie et de musique The Académie de Poésie et de Musique (french: Académie de poésie et de musique), later renamed the Académie du Palais, was the first Academy in France. It was founded in 1570 under the auspices of Charles IX of France by the poet Jean-Antoine ...
, of which Costeley was a founding member; there is, however, no evidence of any musical composition by Costeley between 1570 and his death in 1606. He was lauded by the group and took part in its activities (the king himself was probably a member, and attended some of their meetings, as did his successor
Charles IX after 1574).
Baïf himself, the founder of the Académie, wrote several poems in Costeley's honor.
However Costeley was no longer resident full-time at Paris. He had purchased a house in
Évreux
Évreux () is a commune in and the capital of the department of Eure, in the French region of Normandy.
Geography
The city is on the Iton river.
Climate
History
In late Antiquity, the town, attested in the fourth century CE, was named ...
in
Normandy
Normandy (; french: link=no, Normandie ; nrf, Normaundie, Nouormandie ; from Old French , plural of ''Normant'', originally from the word for "northman" in several Scandinavian languages) is a geographical and cultural region in Northwestern ...
, and married; the King only required him to be at court for the first three months of the year. Records of his property purchases indicate that he had become wealthy in service of the king. In 1581 he was made tax assessor at Évreux, and in 1592 his wife died and he married again. In 1597 he was named as an advisor to the king ("Conseiller du Roy"), and he seems to have remained in Évreux in semi-retirement until his death.
Music and influence
Costeley's surviving music amounts to about 100
chanson
A (, , french: chanson française, link=no, ; ) is generally any lyric-driven French song, though it most often refers to the secular polyphonic French songs of late medieval and Renaissance music. The genre had origins in the monophonic s ...
s, as well as three
motet
In Western classical music, a motet is mainly a vocal musical composition, of highly diverse form and style, from high medieval music to the present. The motet was one of the pre-eminent polyphonic forms of Renaissance music. According to Margar ...
s and a fantasy for organ. Everything that he wrote can be dated to the period between 1554 and 1569.
[Godt, Grove, vol. 4 p.825-6.]
His motets, his only known sacred works, are for four and five voices and show the influence of
Jean Maillard
Jean Maillard (c. 1515 – after 1570) was a French composer of the Renaissance.
While little is known with certainty about his life, he may have been associated with the French royal court, since he wrote at least one motet for them. Most li ...
. A connection between the two is assumed since they both set the same unusual text (''Domine salvum fac regem desiderium cordis ejus''), and their settings contain apparently deliberate similarities.
Costeley's chansons were by far the most famous part of his output, and they are in the Parisian chanson style of the time, with vivid
word painting
Word painting, also known as tone painting or text painting, is the musical technique of composing music that reflects the literal meaning of a song's lyrics or story elements in programmatic music.
Historical development
Tone painting of words ...
, along with a tendency to think harmonically rather than polyphonically – as the age of purely polyphonic writing was coming to an end over most of Europe. The subject matter of the chansons is widely varied, as was true for most composers in the genre; some of the chansons are love songs, some are imitations of war or victory odes, and some are humorous or scatological.
A peculiarity of Costeley's style – and his notation – is that he specified the accidentals he wanted applied to his music with great care and precision, something which was unusual prior to the middle of the 16th century, but which began to occur thereafter. He was fond of unusual melodic intervals, such as the diminished third, and probably wanted to make sure they were performed correctly. Some of his chansons, for example the earthy ''Grosse garce noire et tendre'', use this interval prominently: in this work he uses it in an imitative passage. In other pieces he uses augmented intervals, including seconds, fourths, fifths, and sixths.
[Godt, Grove, vol. 4 p. 826] Even more unusual than his use of previously prohibited intervals, however, is his pioneering use of microtones. The chanson ''Seigneur Dieu ta pitié'' of 1558 made use of justly tuned enharmonic intervals which, if played on a keyboard instrument, would require nineteen keys per octave; Costeley specifies that tuning such an instrument in equal "thirds of a tone" would be necessary to perform his chanson. This amounts to a specification of
19 equal temperament
In music, 19 Tone Equal Temperament, called 19 TET, 19 EDO ("Equal Division of the Octave"), or 19 ET, is the tempered scale derived by dividing the octave into 19 equal steps (equal frequency ratios). Each step represent ...
for a keyboard version of this chanson.
While he was a member of Jean-Antoine de Baïf's ''Academie de musique et de poésie'', few of his works show the influence of, or intent to contribute to, the newly developed genre of ''musique mesurée''. Only two compositions in the collection entitled ''Musique'', published in 1570, show the metrical freedom which characterizes the style.
One instrumental composition by Costeley has survived, and that only in a reconstructed version from a manuscript prepared by a non-musician. It is a short fantasie for organ (''Fantasie''
our
Our or OUR may refer to:
* The possessive form of "we"
* Our (river), in Belgium, Luxembourg, and Germany
* Our, Belgium, a village in Belgium
* Our, Jura, a commune in France
* Office of Utilities Regulation (OUR), a Politics of Jamaica#Regulator ...
''orgue ou espinette faicte par monsieur Coteley
usiciende la Chappelle du Roy''), and is considered significant because it is one of the only surviving bits of keyboard music from late 16th-century France, other than pieces transcribed from vocal originals. The repertory of French keyboard players from the time seems to not have been written down, and certainly remained unpublished.
Selected recordings
* ''Airs et chansons au temps du roy Henry.''
A Sei Voci 1987, digital re-release 2010
[Annales de Normandie - Volume 37 - Page 481 Centre national de la recherche scientifique (France) - 1987 Guillaume COSTELEY, Guillaume de CHASTILLON. Airs et chansons en Normandie au temps du roy Henry. — 61350 Passais-la- Conception, Editions Pluriel, B.P. 21, Mantilly. Disque 30 cm ou cassette. 90 F. Interprété par « A sei Voci ».]
* Guillaume Costeley ''Musicque''
A Sei Voci Erato Records
Erato Records is a record label founded in 1953 as Disques Erato by Philippe Loury to promote French classical music. Loury was head of éditions musicales Costallat. His first releases in France were licensed from the Haydn Society of Boston, a ...
1999
* Guillaume Costeley ''Mignonne Allons Voir Si La Rose : Chansons Spirituelles Et Amoureuses'' Ludus Modalis,
Bruno Boterf
Bruno Boterf is a contemporary French tenor, specialising in Baroque and early music.
Biography
Boterf began his career within the and the Groupe Vocal de France before joining the Ensemble Clément Janequin of which he was a member until 2007. ...
Ramée
Outhere Music is a Belgian classical music and jazz publisher, directed by Charles Adriaenssen, which owns several formerly independent labels, many of them boutique early music specialists:
* Fuga Libera, a Belgian label founded in 2004 under th ...
2013
Notes
References
*Irving Godt: "Guillaume Costeley." ''The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians'', ed. Stanley Sadie. 20 vol. London, Macmillan Publishers Ltd., 1980.
*Irving Godt: "Guillaume Costeley", Grove Music Online, ed. L. Macy (Accessed March 23, 2006)
(subscription access) (Note: as of July 2007, this article is identical to that in the 1980 edition of the New Grove.)
*Kenneth J. Levy, "Costeley's Chromatic Chanson," ''Annales Musicologiques: Moyen-Age et Renaissance'' 3 (1955): 213–61.
*
Gustave Reese
Gustave Reese ( ; 29 November 1899 – 7 September 1977) was an American musicologist and teacher. Reese is known mainly for his work on medieval and Renaissance music, particularly with his two publications ''Music in the Middle Ages'' (1940) ...
, ''Music in the Renaissance''. New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1954.
External links
*
*
Guillaume Costeley
{{DEFAULTSORT:Costeley, Guillaume
French classical composers
French male classical composers
Renaissance composers
French classical organists
French male organists
Composers for pipe organ
French music theorists
1530s births
1606 deaths
French male non-fiction writers
Male classical organists