'Philippe Verdelot' (
1480 to
1485 – c.
1530 to
1532?) was a
French composer of the
Renaissance, who spent most of his life in
Italy. He is commonly considered to be the father of the Italian
madrigal, and certainly was one of its earliest and most prolific composers; in addition he was prominent in the musical life of
Florence during the period after the recapture of the city by the
Medici from the followers of
Girolamo Savonarola.
Life
Verdelot was born Les Loges, Seine-et-Marne, France. Details of his early life are obscure. He probably came to Italy at an early age, spending the first decade or two of the 16th century at some cities in northern Italy, most likely including
Venice. A painting of 1511, described by
Vasari but never positively identified, is believed by many musicologists to show Verdelot in Venice with an Italian singer.
Verdelot is known to have been ''maestro di cappella '' at the Baptisterium San Giovanni in Florence from
1523 to
1525; and he seems also to have been employed at the Cathedral there, from 1523 until
1527. In 1526 he collaborated with Niccolò Machiavelli on a production of Machiavelli's famous cynical comedy ''
La Mandragola''. While the play was written in 1518, the 1526 performance in Florence was dedicated to the Medici pope,
Clement VII. Both Machiavelli, expelled from Florence by the Medici, and Verdelot, generally sided with the Florentine Republic against the Medici, but attempted to play the delicate political game of pleasing both sides. The several pieces which Verdelot wrote for Machiavelli's play, while called ''canzone'', are considered to be the earliest madrigals.
[1]
In addition to siding with the Florentine Republic, Verdelot was most likely a supporter of martyred reformer
Girolamo Savonarola. This is shown by several of his works: his setting of ''In te domine speravi'', based on the psalm which was the subject of that man's last writing before he was burned at the stake; and the use of the tune most closely associated with the monk, ''
Ecce quam bonum'', the song which unified his followers during his final conflict, and which appears in the inner voices in Verdelot's motet ''Letamini in domino.''
[2]
Verdelot may have been killed in the siege of Florence (
1529-
1530) or in the simultaneous plague that ravaged the city, since there is no definite evidence that he was alive after 1530.
[3] That he was there during the siege has been considered likely on the evidence of one of his motets, composed around that time, ''Congregati sunt inimici nostri''. In this work, texts from Ecclesiasticus are woven together with the Antiphon for Peace, "Da pacem Domine", which is used as a cantus firmus.
[4]
Some scholars infer that Verdelot was alive until about
1540, based on some ambiguous references to contemporary events in his works published during the
1530s. Several books of
madrigals published in Venice in the late 1530s include his work; one of these books is devoted entirely to him. Possibly he moved to Venice after the siege to escape the notoriously vengeful, and victorious, Medici. He is known to have been dead by 1552, when writer Ortenzo Landi mentioned him as being deceased.
Music and influence
Verdelot, along with
Costanzo Festa, is considered to be the father of the madrigal, an
a cappella vocal form which emerged in the late 1520s from a convergence of several previous musical streams (including the
frottola, the
canzone, the
laude, and also including some influence from the more serious style of the
motet).
Verdelot's style balances
homophonic with imitative textures, rarely using
word-painting, which was largely a later development (though a few interesting foreshadowings can be found). Most of his madrigals are for five or six voices.
Verdelot's madrigals were hugely popular, as can be inferred from their frequency of reprinting and their wide dissemination throughout Europe in the 16th century. He also composed motets and masses.
References and further reading
★
Gustave Reese, ''Music in the Renaissance''. New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1954. ISBN 0-393-09530-4
★ ''The Concise Edition of Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians'', 8th ed. Revised by Nicolas Slonimsky. New York, Schirmer Books, 1993. ISBN 0-02-872416-X
★ H. Colin Slim/Stefano La Via: "Philippe Verdelot", Grove Music Online, ed. L. Macy (Accessed July 28, 2006),
(subscription access)
★
Susan McClary, ''Modal Subjectivities: Self-Fashioning in the Italian Madrigal'', p. 38-56. Berkeley, University of California Press. 2004. ISBN 0-520-23493-6
Notes
1. McClary, 38-56.
2. Macey, 23.
3. Gangwere, p. 250.
4. Gangwere, p. 250.
External links
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