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Magister Franciscus

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14th-century medieval French composer

This article is about the French ars nova composer. For the Italian Trecento composer sometimes known by the same name, see Francesco Landini.

Magister Franciscus (fl. 1370–80) was a French composer-poet in the ars nova style of late medieval music. He is known for two surviving works, the three-part ballades: De Narcissus and Phiton, Phiton, beste tres venimeuse; the former was widely distributed in his lifetime. Modern scholarship disagrees on whether Franciscus was the same person as the composer F. Andrieu.

Identity career

Franciscus may be the same person as the F. Andrieu who wrote Armes, amours/O flour des flours, a déploration on the death of poet-composer Guillaume de Machaut (c. 1300–1377). Although, the scholarly consensus on this identification is unclear. He may also be Franciscus de Goano or Johannes Franchois. Machaut was the most dominant and important composer of the 14th century, and Franciscus's works show many similarities to his, suggesting the two were contemporaries.

Music

Only two of his works survive, the three-part ballades: De Narcissus and Phiton, Phiton, beste tres venimeuse. They are both contained in the Chantilly Codex. Reaney notes that Magister Franciscus's works are likely earlier than Andrieu's, between 1370 and 1376.

Works

List of compositions by Magister Franciscus
Title No. of voices Genre Manuscript source: Folios Apel Greene
De Narcissus 3 Ballade Chantilly Codex: 19v A 26 G Vol 18: 16
Phiton, Phiton, beste tres venimeuse 3 Ballade Chantilly Codex: 20v A 27 G Vol 18: 18
No other works by Magister Franciscus survive

Editions

Franciscus's works are included in the following collections:

Recordings

Recordings of music by Magister Franciscus
Year Album Performers Piece Label
1950 or before Monuments of the Ars Nova, vol. 102 Various De Narcissus Oiseau-Lyre OL 102
1973 The Late 14th Century Avant Garde Early Music Consort of London Phiton, Phiton, beste tres venimeuse EMI/HMV ASD 3621

References

Notes

  1. Scholars identify F. Andrieu as Magister Franciscus with varying degrees of certainty:
    • Reaney 2001: Their works being from the same manuscript "suggest that the two composers may be the same person".
    • Abraham & Hughes 1960, p. 27: "Franciscus is doubtless the same man as the F. Andrieu..."
    • Reaney 1954, p. 67: "It would not be impossible for Magister Franciscus and F. Andrieu to be one and the same person"
    • Günther 2001: " may be the F. Andrieu..."
    • Strohm 2005, p. 53: " may be the same man as Magister Franciscus"
    • Magnan 1993, p. 49: " this tenuous identification leads nowhere."
  2. If Magister Franciscus is identifiable with F. Andrieu, then Andrieu's compositions would be his as well.

Citations

  1. ^ Günther 2001.
  2. ^ Reaney 2001.
  3. Reese 1940, p. 359.
  4. Abraham & Hughes 1960, p. 27.
  5. Reaney 1954, p. 67.
  6. "Recordings of works by Magister Franciscus". lib.latrobe.edu.au. La Trobe University. Retrieved 13 July 2022.

Sources

Books
Journals and articles

External links

Ars nova
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