-
Gilles de Bins dit
Binchois,
consisting of the
byname 'Gilles de Binche' (also
spelled 'Gilles de Bins') and the dit name
Binchois (also
spelled 'Binchoys')...
-
generation (1420–1450),
dominated by Jean Ta****ier,
Guillaume Du Fay,
Gilles Binchois and
Antoine Busnois; this
group of
composers is most
often known as the...
- only one of
which is
attributed (to
Gilles Binchois),
although many of the rest have been ****igned to
Binchois, Dunstaple, Dufay, and others, on stylistic...
-
subsequent music of
continental Europe,
inspiring composers such as Du Fay,
Binchois,
Ockeghem and Busnois.
Information on Dunstaple's life is
largely non-existent...
- and
Binchois have been
grouped together since their lifetimes. The
musicologist Reinhard Strohm considers this misleading,
noting that
while Binchois "earned...
- (such as Jan van Eyck) and of Franco-Flemish
composers (such as
Gilles Binchois), and for the 1430
seizure of Joan of Arc, whom
Philip ransomed to the...
-
Important composers of
Renaissance motets include:
Alexander Agricola Gilles Binchois Antoine Boësset
Antoine Brumel Antoine Busnois William Byrd
Johannes Vodni****...
- Dunstaple,
Johannes Ockeghem,
Orlande de L****us,
Guillaume Du Fay,
Gilles Binchois,
Thomas Tallis,
William Byrd,
Giovanni Gabrieli,
Carlo Gesualdo, John Dowland...
- Me has been set to music; two well-known
examples are
those by
Gilles Binchois (Bologna,
International museum and
library of music, Ms Q15) and Tomás...
- a
midpoint between the
simplicity and
homophonic textures of
Dufay and
Binchois, and the soon-to-be
pervasive imitative counterpoint of
Josquin and Gombert...