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The following is a chronological list of classical music composers who lived in, worked in, or were citizens of France. This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources. Medieval Leonin (c. 1150 – 1201) Perotin (1160 – 1230) Adam de la Halle (1240 – 1287) Philippe de Vitry (1291 ...
The French musician Adam de la Halle is identified among these minstrels, [2] along with twenty-six harpists, thirteen fiddlers (including Tomasin, the Prince of Wales's own fiddler, Nicholas de Caumbray, vidulator to Philip IV of France, and the Englishman Le Roy Druet, called "King of the Minstrels"), three gigatores (rebec players) from ...
This is an alphabetical list of composers from France This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources .
date unknown – Guillaume le Vinier, French trouvère (b. c.1190) 1253 7 July – Thibaut IV, Count of Champagne and Brie, King of Navarre (b. 30 May 1201) 1260 date unknown – Richart de Fournival, French trouvère; 1284 4 April – Alfonso X of Castile; 1286 8 October – John I, Duke of Brittany, French trouvère (b. 1217)
The popularity of French music in the rest of Europe declined slightly, yet the popular chanson and the old motet were further developed during this time. The epicenter of French music moved from Paris to Burgundy, as it followed the Burgundian School of composers. During the Baroque period, music was simplified and restricted due to Calvinist ...
The town on the Rhône had developed into an active cultural center, and produced the most significant surviving body of secular song of the late fourteenth century. [5] The style spread into northern Spain and as far as Cyprus (which was a French cultural outpost at the time). [6] French, Flemish, Spanish and Italian composers used the style.
The song was released in 1997 as her debut international single in 33 countries worldwide, and made the charts in Europe (#1 in Italy), America (#16 in USA Billboard), and Asia (#1 in Indonesia, #3 in Malaysia). French music also found surprising favorable reception in Japan, where
B. René-Louis Baron; Pierre Barouh; Yves Baudrier; Alex Beaupain; Jean-Pascal Beintus; Roger Bellon; Irénée Berge; David Bergeaud; Jean-Michel Bernard; Alain Bernaud