Gilles Binchois
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Gilles de Bins dit Binchois (also Binchoys; Template:Circa – 20 September 1460) was a Franco-Flemish composer and singer of early Renaissance music. A central figure of the Burgundian School, Binchois is renowned a melodist and miniaturist; he generally avoided large scale works, and is most admired for his shorter secular chansons. Contemporary musicologists generally rank his importance below his colleague Guillaume Du Fay and the English composer John Dunstaple, but together the three were the most celebrated composers of the early European Renaissance.
Binchois was born in Mons (modern-day Belgium) to an upper-class family from Binche. His youth is largely unknown, although early chorister training is likely; by late 1419 he had obtained a local organist post. By 1423 he was in Lille and probably a soldier under the Englishman William de la Pole, eventually in Paris and Hainaut. Sometime during the 1420s, Binchois settled in the culturally thriving court of Burgundy under Philip the Good, where he became a subdeacon and was awarded numerous prebends. He retired to Soignies in 1453 amid a substantial courtly pension, dying in 1460.
It is thought that considerably more of his sacred music survives than secular music, creating a "paradoxical image" of the composer.Template:Sfn Reflecting on his style, the Encyclopædia Britannica comments that "Binchois cultivated the gently subtle rhythm, the suavely graceful melody, and the smooth treatment of dissonance of his English contemporaries".Template:Sfn
Life
Early life
The composer's full name is Gilles de Bins dit Binchois,Template:Sfn consisting of the byname 'Gilles de Binche' (also spelled 'Gilles de Bins') and the dit name Binchois (also spelled 'Binchoys').Template:SfnTemplate:Refn Obituary records from St Vincent, Soignies name his parents as Johannes and Johanna de Binche, usually identified with Jean de Binch (Template:Died in?) and his wife Jeanne, née Paulouche (Template:Died in?).Template:Sfn His parents were of the upper class in Mons and probably from the town of Binche; his father was a councillor to Duke William IV of Hainault and later Jacqueline, Countess of Hainaut.Template:Sfn The elder Binchois was also a councillor for the Ste Waudru church of Mons, and built a chapel for the St Germain church.Template:Sfn Their son Gilles Binchois was probably born in Mons, then in the County of Hainaut, the same city in which the composer Orlande de Lassus would be born a century later.Template:Sfn There is no documentary evidence that Binchois was born in the town of Binche, a few miles from Mons, as is sometimes assumed.Template:Sfn
Nothing for certain is known about Binchois until 8 December 1419, when he is known to have been the organist at Ste Waudru in Mons.Template:Sfn It is possible that Gilles Binchois received an early musical education near the court of Mons, and like other composers of his time, he probably trained as a chorister in his youth, perhaps at St Germain.Template:Sfn An account from Template:Ill (1880) which refers to the chorister Jean de Binche at Cambrai Cathedral has often been misinterpreted as referring to Binchois.Template:Sfn There is no evidence that Binchois was a chorister at Cambrai in his youth.Template:Sfn As is known, he never received an academic degree of any kind.Template:Sfn
Records from 28 July 1423 indicates that he soon moved to Lille.Template:Sfn Around this time he may have been a soldier, as indicated by a line in the funeral motet Deploration for Binchois, composed in his memory by the composer Johannes Ockeghem.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Binchois might have served under the Englishman William de la Pole, 1st Duke of Suffolk, who was in France for the Hundred Years' War;Template:Sfn Binchois is assumed to have been in Paris, alongside the composer Estienne Grossin.Template:Sfn This association is evidenced by a 1426 document which records that the Duke of Suffolk commissioned the otherwise unknown rondel Ainsi que a la foiz m’y souvient from a 'Binchoiz'.Template:Sfn At some point Binchois went with William to Hainaut.Template:Sfn
Burgundian court

Sometime during the late 1420s Binchois joined the court chapel choir of Burgundy; the exact date is unknown due to chapel's lost employment records from 1419 to 1436.Template:Sfn A 1427 disposition from Guillaume Benoit which includes Binchois' name suggests he was there by then, though this is uncertain.Template:Sfn He was certainly in the chapel when he wrote the motet Nove cantum melodie—one of his only datable compositions—on the 18th of January 1431, as it was for the baptism of Anthony, bastard of Burgundy; the motet's text names Binchois alongside the composer Pierre Fontaine.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The musicologist David Fallows notes that "he must have been there some years earlier since the list of 1436 places him as fifth chaplain in order of seniority within the choir".Template:Sfn The Burgundian court under Philip the Good was perhaps the most lively and prominent court of the area; its members compared it to that of Alexander The Great.Template:Sfn The musicologist Reinhard Strohm commented that Philip's court of "eclectic and flamboyant culture typified the feudal aspirations of the age".Template:Sfn This golden age was not from any specific innovations by Philip specifically, but his continued patronage after a long-line of monarchial support for the arts.Template:Sfn
Among the residents of the court was the painter Jan van Eyck, who, according to the art historian Erwin Panofsky, may have portrayed Binchois in the Léal Souvenir portrait, though there is no widespread agreement for this.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Binchois was associated with the leading composer of his day, Guillaume Du Fay.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn They likely met, alongside the poet Martin le Franc, during a meeting at Chambéry of the Burgundian and Savoy courts in February 1434.Template:Sfn It was probably here that Le Franc wrote his famous Le champion des dames poem, which depicts the two composers and blind Burgundian vielle players.Template:Sfn The only certain meeting of the composers was in March 1449, when Du Fay resided with Binchois in Mons for a convocation of canons.Template:SfnTemplate:Refn Aside from Du Fay, important composer contemporaries of the region included Hugo de Lantins and Arnold de Lantins.Template:SfnTemplate:Refn
The Burgundian chapel choir was unique in allowing its members to become clergy without being ordained as a priest;Template:Sfn in 1437 Binchois became a subdeacon.Template:Sfn Probably due to Philip's favor, he held prebends for at least four churches until his death: St Donatian, Bruges (from 7 January 1430); Ste Waudru, Mons (from 17 May 1437); St Vincent, Soignies (from 1452); and St Pierre, Cassel (from 21 May 1459).Template:Sfn He was also made honorary court secretary in 1437 by Philip, who paid for a now-lost work by him on 29 May 1438, Passions en nouvelle maniere.Template:Sfn It is possible that Binchois had some experience in medicine, since he attended to a duchess's toothache in July 1437, Template:Sfn receiving 30 sous.Template:Sfn The choir's attendance records are fairly thorough, and indicate that Binchois did not travel much on his own.Template:Sfn
Final Soignies years
He eventually retired in Soignies by February 1453, receiving a substantial pension until his death, presumably for his long years of exemplary service to the Burgundian court.Template:Sfn In 1452 he became provost of the collegiate church of St Vincent.Template:Sfn Around this time Soignies grew its reputation for musical excellence; Guillaume Malbecque and Johannes Regis were active there, while the contemporary writers Jacobus Lessabaeus and Lodovico Guicciardini praised the town's musical standard.Template:Sfn Binchois may have been involved in the well known 1454 Feast of the Pheasant in Lille, as the motet Lamentatio sanctae matris ecclesiae Constantinopolitanae was performed, which may be by Binchois, but is usually ascribed to Du Fay.Template:Sfn
On 20 September 1460 Binchois died in Soignies;Template:Sfn his will mentions otherwise unknown family members, including his brothers Andri de Binch and Ernoul de Binch.Template:Sfn He was buried in St. Vincent's collegiate church.Template:Sfn Upon his death Ockeghem wrote a deploration, Mort, tu as navré de ton dart; its opening appears to quote an otherwise unknown chanson by Binchois.Template:Sfn Fallows has suggested that Du Fay composed the rondeau En triumphant in 1460 for his colleague's death,Template:Sfn since it seemingly references two songs by Binchois.Template:SfnTemplate:Refn
Music
The Encyclopædia Britannica characterizes Binchois' musical style as emphasizing "gently subtle rhythm, the suavely graceful melody, and the smooth treatment of dissonance [found in the music] of his English contemporaries".Template:Sfn As a melodist, he is often considered among the finest of the 15th century;Template:Sfn Fallows argues that in this regard, he had no contemporary equal.Template:Sfn Binchois' composed exclusively vocal music; his compositions include 28 mass movements, 32 psalms, 28 smaller sacred works, 54 chansons, and a variety of motets.Template:Sfn Most are written for three voices, although some have four.Template:Sfn
Most commentators agree that Binchois was not a progressive composer.Template:Sfn The musicologist Reinhard Strohm concludes that although he "earned his enormous reputation in the one genre in which he excelled as a composer [...] this master of melody and courtly performer apparently does not explore the depths of the art".Template:Sfn Binchois utilized a limited range of techniques, favoring older melodic styles that echoed the 12th-century amour courtois (Template:Lit.) tradition of the troubadours and trouvères.Template:Sfn His genre preference was equally conservative, favoring small-scale works over more fashionable cyclic masses and cantus firmus masses based on secular tunes.Template:Sfn This preference led to musicologist Anthony Pryer to describe him as a "supreme miniaturist".Template:Sfn Indeed only a single large-scale work of his survives, the incomplete isorhythmic motet Nove cantum melodie (1481).Template:SfnTemplate:Refn
Binchois' treatment of cadences was more forward-looking; he occasionally approached the dominant scale-degree and leading-tone with a tonal sensibilities of the later common practice period.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn His progressive use of dissonance has also incited much discussion—he often embraced moments of dissonant part writing, even when it was "easily avoided".Template:Sfn Joan A. Boucher also noted that Binchois' wide range use of the bass voice was unique for his time.Template:Sfn
Like Du Fay, Binchois was deeply influenced by the contenance angloise style of John Dunstaple and Lionel Power, which uniquely emphasized the third and sixth intervals and often highlighted duets within larger textures.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Although Binchois probably never visited England,Template:Sfn the Burgundian court had good relations with the English, with whom they established both diplomatic and cultural links;Template:Sfn the Renaissance scholar Gordon Campbell notes that Binchois was "ideally placed to absorb and reflect styles from across the channel".Template:SfnTemplate:Refn The English influence was such that three settings of antiphons by Power and Dunstable, along with a motet by Standley, were long-misattributed to Binchois.Template:Sfn Strohm cautions that this influence was not prevalent enough to consider any of Binchois' works to be English in style or imitating an English model:Template:Sfn "he followed his own, aural version of contenance angloise".Template:Sfn
Secular

Binchois is best known for his lyric-driven secular French songs, known as chansons, which were widely transmitted and imitated by fellow composers.Template:Sfn During Binchois' lifetime, the rondeau became the dominant chanson-type of the three formes fixes.Template:Sfn This was reflected in Binchois' body of work: of his 54 chansons, the vast majority (47) are rondeaux and seven are ballades.Template:Sfn His songs are almost exclusively in triple time, save for the rondeau "Seule esgaree" in duple meter.Template:Sfn Other stylistic tropes include the use of under-third cadences (Landini cadences), the favoring of short phrases and material repetition.Template:Sfn Pryer explains that "these superficial repetitions serve to demonstrate Binchois' flexibility, since it is rare for two phrases to have exactly the same rhythmic or melodic contour, and consecutive phrases rarely end on the same pitch or note-value."Template:Sfn His melodies value simplicity, economy of material and, outside of the codas, minimal rhythmic activity.Template:Sfn The musicologist Hans-Otto Korth has noted a resemblance between the melodic character and simplicity of Binchois' music and that of folk music, emphasizing it is a similarity in effect, not necessarily an influence.Template:Sfn Fallows highlights these sentiments in numerous works: the "unforgettable grace" of "De plus en plus"; "restrained elegance" of "Mon cuer chante"; and "carefully balanced phrases" of "Adieu jusques je vous revoye".Template:Sfn
The lyrics Binchois set were often by prominent French poet contemporaries, such as Charles, Duke of Orléans, Alain Chartier and Christine de Pizan.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Refn He chiefly prioritized serious courtly subjects, unlike his contemporaries who wrote spoof songs and celebratory songs for May Day and New Year's Day; the combinative chanson "Filles a marier/Se tu t’en marias", which cautions against marriage, is an exception.Template:Sfn Binchois' method of text setting was often unique from his peers;Template:Sfn his melodies are generally independent of the poem's rhyme scheme.Template:Sfn Scholars note that his tendency to favor musical structure over poetic form has made their combination unpredictable in his works.Template:Sfn This is a stark departure from the careful music-text balance of Guillaume Du Fay's compositions.Template:Sfn Fallows suggests that this approach is an attempt to counter the strict structural rules of the formes fixes,Template:Sfn while Slavin describes this attitude as more medieval than Humanistic-Renaissance.Template:Sfn
In addition to not prioritizing poetic structure, Binchois heavily emphasized musical symmetry.Template:Sfn The musicologist Wolfgang Rehm was the first to note that numerous Binchois songs, particularly early works, are symmetrically constructed in their length and the location of their middle cadence.Template:Sfn Rehm also observed that in five-line rondeaux, Binchois added a sixth non-texted musical line, so that the music remained symmetrical.Template:Sfn In works such as the rondeau "Amours et souvenir", abba poems are offset by an abab musical passage.Template:Sfn As such, Binchois stands out from other Renaissance composers in that "poetic form of a song cannot always be deduced correctly from the music alone".Template:Sfn
Sacred
Most of Binchois' sacred output is individual mass movements, alongside psalm and canticle settings (particularly magnificats) and a variety of smaller sacred works.Template:Sfn No complete cyclic mass is extant and although scholars such as Template:Ill and Arthur Parris have attempted to combine movements into a complete work, Fallows considers these nowhere near the coherency of other Renaissance masses.Template:Sfn Although a few pairs of movements are known, their unification comes from overarching stylistic similarities, not specific musical material.Template:Sfn These mass movements are based around chant; unlike his contemporaries, the chant is used in a forward-looking manner: a starting point, not a strict foundation, allowing for more creative liberty.Template:Sfn Conversely the overall mass movement structure is relatively conservative.Template:Sfn
It is generally assumed that considerably more of Binchois' total sacred music survives than secular, creating a "paradoxical image" of a composer best known for the latter.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Regardless, the ease at which his secular output can be analyzed—both stylistically and chronologically—does not transfer here.Template:Sfn The various church forms are treated distinctly, often without stylistic parallels.Template:Sfn There are also departures from Binchois' secular characteristics: very few Burgundian cadences (octave-leap cadences), less major prolation, more selective tempus perfectum diminutum and less regular symmetry.Template:Sfn
Counterpoint was not a priority to Binchois, who instead emphasized text declamation and musical contour.Template:Sfn Thus his sacred output is often considered comparatively uninspired and routine; "severely practical" in the opinion of Pryer.Template:Sfn Oftentimes the work's chant source is harmonized in a basic, "note-against-note" manner, with such harmony in the top voice, akin to the continental standard then.Template:Sfn Homophony is his sacred texture of choice, typically in the fauxbourdon style, with melodies based on the Parisian rite—a then-fashionable approach in Burgundy.Template:Sfn Fallows notes that even the simplistic counterpoint in his magnificats is more extreme in unremarkability than routine magnificats by Du Fay and Dunstaple.Template:Sfn From these characteristics, Fallows considers Binchois' sacred works most similar to those of Johannes Brassart and Johannes de Limburgia.Template:Sfn
Legacy
Modern musicologists generally hold Binchois, along with Du Fay and John Dunstable as the three major European composers of the early 15th-century.Template:Sfn Binchois, however, is usually ranked below the other two.Template:Sfn Although Du Fay and Binchois have been grouped together since their lifetimes, the musicologist Reinhard Strohm considers this misleading, noting that while Binchois "earned his enormous reputation in the one genre in which he excelled as a composer, performer and possibly even poet, Du Fay's creativity unfolded along many more musical lines".Template:Sfn In general Du Fay is often considered the leading European composer of his lifetime,Template:Sfn and his career was both lengthier and more prolific than Binchois.Template:Sfn While Dunstaple was described by the musicologist Margaret Bent as "probably the most influential English composer of all time."Template:Sfn Reflecting on this, Fallows contends that regardless, "the extent to which [Binchois'] works were borrowed, cited, parodied and intabulated in the later 15th century implies that he had more direct influence than either [Du Fay or Dunstaple]".Template:Sfn
His tunes appeared in copies decades after his death, and were often used as sources for Mass composition by later composers.Template:Sfn About half of his extant secular music is found in the manuscript Oxford, Bodleian Library MS Canon. misc. 213.Template:Sfn
Editions
- The standard editions for Binchois' sacred and secular music are Template:Harvnb and Template:Harvnb respectivelyTemplate:Sfn
- Historical editions
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References
Notes
Citations
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Further reading
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