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Micheline's Blog

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Daily Archives: January 4, 2012

Jean-Antoine du Baïf & l’Académie de poésie et de musique

04 Wednesday Jan 2012

Posted by michelinewalker in Music

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Académie de Poésie et de Musique, Antoine de Baïf, Charles IX., Claude Le Jeune, Huguenot, Renaissance, St. Bartholomew's Day massacre, vers mesurés à l'antique

Huguenot Crest

This is probably my last post on the subject of the Pléiade, but there is one story I would like to share with you, that of the Académie de poésie et de musique founded, in 1570, by Jean-Antoine de Baïf and Joachim Thibault de Courville, under the auspices of Charles IX.  Royal patronage could explain why the Académie de poésie et de musique is considered the first Académie to be founded in France.

In theory, members of the Académie attempted to write verses measured in the same manner as Greek verses, vers mezurés à l’antique.* The Académie‘s endeavour was perfectly legitimate and encouraged by Ronsard himself.  However, members met in such secrecy that it would not be unreasonable to suspect a Huguenot connection.

*There was and may still be a Baïf font for Mac computers.

Jean-Antoine de Baïf

Jean-Antoine de Baïf (Venice, February 1532; Paris, 19 September 1589), the co-founded of the Académie, was the natural son of diplomat and Hellenist Lazare de Baïf.  We have no information on Jean-Antoine’s mother.  Jean-Antoine was raised by his father.

The Collège de Coqueret

Lazare was a good father.  He provided his son, at a very early age, with the best teachers he could hire.  In fact, in 1544, after Lazare had returned to Paris, he had his son and his secretary, Pierre de Ronsard, now nearly deaf, educated by Dorat or Doraut, who would become principal at the Collège de Coqueret and was later appointed as professor at the Collège de France, established in 1530.

Pierre de Ronsard was Jean-Antoine’s senior by eight years and at the Collège de Coqueret they met Joachim du Bellay and Pontus du Tyard, Dorat’s pupils and both future members of the Pléiade.  Ronsard, the “prince of poets,” and Du Bellay are the co-founders of the Pléiade.  Jean Dorat, one of Europe’s most prominent Hellenists, also became a member of the Pléiade and was, in fact, the group’s mentor.  The Pléiade consisted of seven members.

L’Académie de Musique et de Poésie

Among members of the Pléiade, Baïf was probably the only poet who was also a musician.  His goal in founding the short-lived Académie de poésie et de musique was, as mentioned above, the creation of poetry and music that would be measured in a manner resembling Greek versification.

Charles IX, by François Clouet*

The St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre 

Catherine de Médicis’s incited her son, King Charles IX, to order the Massacre of the St. Bartholomew’s Day (August 24th [early morning], 1572).  In fact, she plotted the entire event.  The massacre lasted several days and spread to the provinces.  Thousands of Huguenots were slaughtered. Young Charles IX, then 22 years old, barely survived the atrocities.  He was emotionally devastated and physically weakened.  He died in 1774, probably of tuberculosis.

* * *

When Charles IX died, Ronsard, who was supportive of ‘vers mezurés,’ left his rooms at Court.  As for the Académie de Poésie et de Musique, members continued to meet and they received encouragement on the part of famed poet Agrippa d’Aubigné, a Protestant who had left France several years before the St. Bartholomew’s Day Massacre, but the Académie had nevertheless entered a period of decline.  It was revived briefly as l’Académie du Palais, under Henri III, Charles IX’s brother.

Claude Le Jeune, Jacques Mauduit and, perhaps, Eustache Du Caurroy

Very little is known about Baïf’s Académie de poésie et de musique, except that its membership included prominent composers Claude Le Jeune, Jacques Mauduit and, probably, Eustache Du Caurroy.

All three composed musique mezurée à l’antique, but the better-known of the group is Claude Le Jeune (born c. 1527, Valenciennes, Burgundian Hainaut [now in France]—died c. 1600, Paris).  Claude Le Jeune, a Franco-Flemish composer who died a Huguenot, was choirmaster to Henri III, Charles IX’s brother and successor, and music teacher to Henri de Navarre, a Huguenot and the future King of France, Henri IV.

Le Jeune wrote ‘Parisian’ songs, using metrical verses, but also composed madrigals and motets.  Moreover, as a Huguenot, he contributed metrical psalms to the Genevan Psalter, published after his death in 1600.

As for Jacques Mauduit, he is the composer of the masterful Requiem (please click to hear) played at Pierre de Ronsard’s state funeral in 1585.  Mauduit and Du Caurroy were composers of polyphonic music, or music using many voices.

Massacre of the St. Bartholemew’s Day

Vers mezurés and Music

It remains nevertheless that the premature death of Charles IX, dealt a nearly-fatal blow to the Académie.  Moreover, members were not particularly successful at producing vers mesurés in poetry.  Set to music, however, vers mesurés or metrical psalms were quite pleasant.  So, there is a sense in which Antoine de Baïf experiment was successful, but not for long.  The air de cour became fashionable.

As for Antoine de Baïf, in 1574, he published his Etrénes de poezie fransoèze en vers mezurés (“Gifts of French Poetry in Quantitative Verse”).  As well, in 1586, he composed the lyrics of songs in Greek metrics: Chansonnettes mesurées. The music was written by the above-mentioned Jacques Mauduit, a member of Baïf’s Académie de Poésie et de Musique, the Académie’s foremost musician, and, as I mentioned above, the composer of the Requiem played at Ronsard’s state funeral.

Given its secrecy, the Académie may have been a refuge for Huguenots, but we may never know for certain.  We know, however, that Baïf wrote a long poem commemorating the St Bartholomew’s Day Massacre and that, although he had taken minor orders, Ronsard saved Claude Le Jeune’s life, as did Antoine de Baïf.  But most eloquent of all, is Ronsard’s Discours des misères de ce temps (1562), Discourse on the Miseries of These Times.

In poetry the “vers mezurés” were not very successful.  French is a “flat” language. Stressing syllables other than the last sounded syllable of a word made poems sound unnatural.  But vers mezurés à l’antique had their moment of grace in the history of music.

Henri IV, by François Clouet

Henri IV, by François Clouet (spenceralley.blogspot.com)

*François Clouet

* * *

  • Le Jeune, Claude: Revecy venir du printemps
  • Le Jeune, Claude: Psaumes pour le culte protestant

_________________________

[i] “Jean-Antoine de Baïf.” Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Encyclopædia Britannica Inc., 2012. Web. 04 Jan. 2012.             <http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/49170/Jean-Antoine-de-Baif>.            

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