George de La Hèle: Difference between revisions
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'''Biography''' | '''Biography''' | ||
George de La Hèle trained as a chorister at Antwerp cathedral before moving to Madrid in 1560 to sing in the royal chapel of Philip II, under the musical direction of [[Pierre de Manchicourt]]. Returning to the Low Countries in the 1570s for university study and subsequent appointments as ''maestro di capilla'' at Sint-Romboutskathedraal in Mechelen and Notre-Dame Cathedral in Tournai, La Hèle was appointed in 1580 to succeed [[Geert van Turnhout]] as ''maestro di capilla'' at the royal chapel in Madrid. He remained in that post until his death, whereupon he was succeeded by [[Philippe Rogier]] (the last in a line of Franco-Flemish incumbents stretching back to [[Marbrianus de Orto]] in 1512). Manuscripts containing much of La Hèle's compositional output were destroyed in a fire at the Palacio Real on Christmas Eve 1734, which may go some way to explaining his apparent obscurity in comparison to the more famous bearers of that important royal office. Only eleven works survive | George de La Hèle trained as a chorister at Antwerp cathedral before moving to Madrid in 1560 to sing in the royal chapel of Philip II, under the musical direction of [[Pierre de Manchicourt]]. Returning to the Low Countries in the 1570s for university study and subsequent appointments as ''maestro di capilla'' at Sint-Romboutskathedraal in Mechelen and Notre-Dame Cathedral in Tournai, La Hèle was appointed in 1580 to succeed [[Geert van Turnhout]] as ''maestro di capilla'' at the royal chapel in Madrid. He remained in that post until his death, whereupon he was succeeded by [[Philippe Rogier]] (the last in a line of Franco-Flemish incumbents stretching back to [[Marbrianus de Orto]] in 1512). Manuscripts containing much of La Hèle's compositional output were destroyed in a fire at the Palacio Real on Christmas Eve 1734, which may go some way to explaining his apparent obscurity in comparison to the more famous bearers of that important royal office. Only eleven works survive: eight masses, two motets, and a chanson that won First Prize at the prestigious Puy de musique d'Évreux composition competition in 1576. One of the motets and all eight masses (based on motets by [[Josquin des Prez|Josquin]], [[Orlande de Lassus|Lassus]], [[Cipriano de Rore|Rore]] and [[Thomas Crecquillon|Crecquillon]]) are contained in a volume published by Christophe Plantin in 1578. | ||
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==Publications== | ==Publications== | ||
*Plantin, ''Octo missae quinque, sex et septem vocum'' [Antwerp, 1578] | *Plantin, ''Octo missae quinque, sex et septem vocum'' [Antwerp, 1578] | ||
*Sales, ''Sacrarum cantionum … Liber I'' [Prague, 1593] | |||
*Phalèse (the Younger), ''[[Le Rossignol musical|Le Rossignol musical des chansons … a quatre, cinq et six parties]]'' [Antwerp, 1597] | |||
==External links== | ==External links== |
Revision as of 02:13, 23 July 2021
Aliases: Georges, de la Hele, Helle
Life
Born: 1547, Antwerp
Died: 27 August 1586, Madrid
Biography
George de La Hèle trained as a chorister at Antwerp cathedral before moving to Madrid in 1560 to sing in the royal chapel of Philip II, under the musical direction of Pierre de Manchicourt. Returning to the Low Countries in the 1570s for university study and subsequent appointments as maestro di capilla at Sint-Romboutskathedraal in Mechelen and Notre-Dame Cathedral in Tournai, La Hèle was appointed in 1580 to succeed Geert van Turnhout as maestro di capilla at the royal chapel in Madrid. He remained in that post until his death, whereupon he was succeeded by Philippe Rogier (the last in a line of Franco-Flemish incumbents stretching back to Marbrianus de Orto in 1512). Manuscripts containing much of La Hèle's compositional output were destroyed in a fire at the Palacio Real on Christmas Eve 1734, which may go some way to explaining his apparent obscurity in comparison to the more famous bearers of that important royal office. Only eleven works survive: eight masses, two motets, and a chanson that won First Prize at the prestigious Puy de musique d'Évreux composition competition in 1576. One of the motets and all eight masses (based on motets by Josquin, Lassus, Rore and Crecquillon) are contained in a volume published by Christophe Plantin in 1578.
View the Wikipedia article on George de La Hèle.
List of choral works
Click here to search for this composer on CPDL
Publications
- Plantin, Octo missae quinque, sex et septem vocum [Antwerp, 1578]
- Sales, Sacrarum cantionum … Liber I [Prague, 1593]
- Phalèse (the Younger), Le Rossignol musical des chansons … a quatre, cinq et six parties [Antwerp, 1597]
External links
- Works by George de La Hèle in the Petrucci Music Library (IMSLP)