Guillaume de Machaut
(c. 1300 - 1377)
La Messe de Nostre
Dame
Ballades, Rondeaux
and Lai from Le Voir Dit
Guillaume de Machaut
was the last great poet who was also a composer. As late as the fifteenth century, high style poetry
and music were intimately linked in sentiment and use, which makes it
surprising that Machaut was the last person to practise both at the highest
level. Yet in each field he was immensely influential. His poetry was admired
and imitated by French poets and by Chaucer, his music by composers throughout Europe well into the fifteenth century.
This disc presents a
selection of related works composed by Machaut in the 13605. We can think of
this as Machaut's 'late period' not just because he was, by medieval standards,
well into his old age, but also because the music and the poetry have that
serenity and other-worldly perfection that we find in late Beethoven or
Stravinsky. Although on the face of it the Mass and these songs are very
different -the Mass, his most famous work, is rooted in the liturgy of the
church and dedicated to the Virgin; the late songs, still very little known,
are messages of courtly love -in their musical substance they have much in
common. It seems likely that they were written during the same few years (c.l360
-65) and that Machaut worked out in their very different forms musical ideas
that filled his imagination at that time.
Ia Messe de Nostre
Dame is
one of the earliest, perhaps the earliest setting of the ordinary of the Mass
as a whole. Machaut probably composed it for performance at the Saturday Lady
Mass celebrated in Reims cathedral at a small altar near the choir screen. His intention
seems to have been that it would function as a Mass in honour of the Virgin
during the remainder of his life, but that after his death it would become a
memorial Mass for himself and his brother Jean, like Guillaume a canon of the
cathedral. In due course the brothers were buried together near the altar, and
the Mass presumably continued to be sung over them for many years, perhaps even
as late as the early fifteenth century.
For this performance
we went back to Reims cathedral in order, as far as possible, to record the Mass in its
original acoustics. The altar to the Virgin was set against the screen, on the
right of the entrance to the choir, so that the singers would have had behind
them a wall of wood or perhaps stone, reflecting their sound back into the
nave. Both screen and altar were removed after the Revolution, so for this
performance the singers were placed in front of the organ immediately east of
the choir step, which gave them a similar sounding-board while retaining the) arger
acoustics of that part of the building. The performance was recorded using Sensaura
and matches with striking fidelity the sound of the performance in the
building. The recording was made over two nights in sub-zero temperatures, both
factors that may have affected the acoustics, but what we hear in this
recording is as close as we can get, at present, to the sound of Machaut's Mass
in its original setting.
There are other ways
in which this performance differs from previous versions. The Kyrie is
sung to Machaut's polyphony in all nine sections, following the unambiguous
indications of the manuscripts. The Credo plainchant intonation is sung
at an alternative pitch found in some northern French manuscripts of the period
but not common today, since it leads more naturally into Machaut's polyphony.
The Ite missa est is sung polyphonically, despite liturgical
custom, because that is indicated in some of the Machaut manuscripts and
because it seems to work. And the singers experimented freely with plicas
-notational signs indicating some kind of ornament -whose meaning is uncertain
but which appear frequently, and for the last time, in Machaut's Mass.
Le Livre dou Voir Dit
is
one of most extraordinary poems of the Middle Ages. Its 9,094 lines of verse,
arranged in octosyllabic rhyming couplets, tell the story of the love between
the elderly Machaut and an adolescent admirer, Peronne. They exchange letters
and lyric poems, some set to music by Machaut, and all these are included,
inserted into the narrative. Because the composition of poetry and music forms
part of the story, Machaut discusses it in the letters and narrative, and we
thus have unique testimony to a medieval composer's understanding of his own
work.
Ploures dames is the first poem
with music that Machaut sends to Peronne, enclosing it in a letter from summer
1362. 'I'm sending you a ballade about the sad state I've been in, and I ask
that you learn the song, for it's not difficult and the music pleases me very
much.' The text takes the form of a will written on the poet's death-bed, in
which he leaves his heart to the women whom his poetry has always praised.
Nes qu'on porroit, the next ballade with
music that Machaut sends (in April 1363), has a strikingly similar setting with
many of the same melodic ideas. Yet its text is very different, a reminder that
medieval music was rarely concerned to mimic words. Machaut tells the reader of
Le Voir Dit that he 'composed this ballade from joyous and agreeable
feelings' and tells Peronne in the accompanying letter that he has made it 'in
the guise of a German dance [res d'alemangne - the precise meaning is unclear],
and by God it's a long time since I've made anything so good; in my opinion.
And the tenors are as sweet as unsalted gruel. So I beg you to deign to hear it
and get to know it just as it was made, without adding or omitting anything.
And it should be sung in good long measure. And if anyone could arrange it for
organ, bagpipes or other instruments that would be its very nature.'
Sans cuer dolens is included in l£
Voir Dit as Machaut leaves Peronne, on or about Friday 12th May 1363, after
their first stay together. He claims to have composed it on the road home, but
in fact it is an earlier song, already included in a manuscript of his work
compiled c. 1350, and Machaut probably inserted it here because of its
appropriate text. This is not the only time that Machaut sends Peronne old
poems as if they were new, and on a subsequent occasion, as we shall see, he
gets caught out.
LDnguement me sui
tenus, the
LAy de Bonne Esperence (Lay of Good Hope), belongs to an allegorical
episode in the story, in which Machaut is taken hostage by the personification
of Hope, and is released by her only on condition that he writes a lay in her
honour. The lay was by far the largest of the lyric forms used by Machaut, and
develops through twelve stanzas, each with two- or four-fold statements of its
poetic scheme and music. It is the only monophonic song in l£ Voir Dit.
Puis qu'en oubli is not named in the
narrative or letters, but in its uniquely low and accompanimentallower voices
corresponds exactly to this description in a letter to Peronne of 29th
September 1363: 'I'm sending you a rondel with music of which I made the tune
and the text some time ago, but I've newly made the tenor and contratenor;
should you like to get to know, it seems to me good.' Peronne, however, is
unimpressed and replies, '1 have had a rondel with music that you sent me, but
I've seen it several times and know it well. I ask you please to send me
others.'
Dix et sept is mentioned in
several letters before Machaut finally sends the music, and thus we learn a
number of interesting things about it. He sends the text in late July 1363,
explaining that it encodes her name (17=R, 5=E, 13=N, 14=O, 15=P), and
promising music by the next messenger he finds. Why he cannot send it at once
becomes clear only in his letter of 9th October: 'My very sweet heart, I've
made the rondel where your name is, and I would have sent it to you by this
messenger, but by my soul I've not yet heard it, and I'm not accustomed to part
with things that I've made until I've heard them. And be certain that it's one
of the best things I've made for seven years, in my opinion... And learn your
rondel please, for I like it a lot.'