Jean Richafort: Difference between revisions

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*Ego sum qui sum, a 5 (conflicting attributions to Hesdin, Mouton)
*Ego sum qui sum, a 5 (conflicting attributions to Hesdin, Mouton)
*{{NoCo|Emendemus in melius}}, a 4
*{{NoCo|Emendemus in melius}}, a 4
*Exaudiat te Dominus, a 4
*''[[Exaudiat te Dominus (Jean Richafort)|Exaudiat te Dominus]]'', a 4
*[[Gaudent in caelis (Philippe Verdelot)]], a 8 (misattributed to Richafort as well as to Phinot)
*[[Gaudent in caelis (Philippe Verdelot)]], a 8 (misattributed to Richafort as well as to Phinot)
*{{NoCo|Gloria laus et honor|Gloria, laus et honor}}, a 4
*{{NoCo|Gloria laus et honor|Gloria, laus et honor}}, a 4

Latest revision as of 16:24, 5 March 2024

Aliases: Jean Richauffort; Jean Rycefort; Jean Ricartsvorde; Joannis Ricartvorde

Life

Born: c. 1480

Died: after 1550

Biography Richafort began his career in Mechelin in 1507 but seems to have had ties to Hainault or Liege; he joined the French royal court and traveled extensively, working at Bologna in 1517. before settling in Bruges. Pierre de Ronsard is the source for his having been a student of Josquin, to whom his Requiem is dedicated. A Joachim Richafort, employed by Queen Mary of Hungary from 1532 to 1543 and settled in Bruges by 1546 has caused some confusion; Jean was employed at St Gilles in Bruges 1543-4 and 1548-50.

View the Wikipedia article on Jean Richafort.

List of choral works

Motets

Chansons

Misattributed

 


Click here to search for this composer on CPDL

Publications

With one posthumous exception Richafort's work was printed in anthologies.

  • Joannis Richafort modulorum quatuor quinque & sex vocum, liber primus (1556, Le Roy & Ballard)

External links