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Jacques Buus

Jacques Buus (also Jakob Buus, Jachet de Buus) (c. 1500 – late August, 1565) was a Franco-Flemish composer and organist of the
Renaissance, and an early member of theVenetian School. He was one of the earliest composers of thericercar, the predecessor to the
fugue, and he was also a skilled composer ofchansons.

Contents
Life
Music and influence
References and further reading
External links

Life
Buus was probably born in Ghent around 1500, though details of his early life, as is the case with most Renaissance composers, are
scanty. Possibly he either studied or had his early career in France, and he maintained some connections there throughout his life. In
1538 he published his first chansons, inLyon by the printer Jacques Moderne.

Three years later he went to Venice and auditioned for the post of second organist at St. Mark's, winning the job, and working
alongside the existing organist, Frate Giovanni Armonio. This was during the tenure of Adrian Willaert, who built the musical forces
at St. Mark's into one of the most impressive in Europe, second only in quality to the papal chapel in Rome. Buus stayed at St. Mark's
until 1550, when he departed for France, ostensibly because he was unable to pay his debts; however it has been suggested that he
left because he had become a Protestant. In 1543 he had dedicated a volume of chansons to the Calvinist Duchess of Ferrara, and in
1550 he sent a book of Protestant chansons spirituelles to the Protestant Archduke Ferdinand II in Vienna. Late in 1550 he went to
Vienna to work at the Habsburg court, and he remained there for the rest of his life, ignoring entreaties from enice
V to return.

Music and influence


Buus was influential in the development of the instrumental ricercar; he wrote the longest ever composed, one of which has no less
than 98 points of imitation. Another has 358 breves (equivalent to 716 bars of 4/4; the typical tactus of the time allotted 60 to 80
minims, i.e. half-notes, to the minute). They are elaborately contrapuntal, making use of all the standard devices of Franco-Flemish
polyphony, including augmentation, diminution, inversion, and so forth.

He also wrote sacred vocal music, including motets and chansons spirituelles, a specifically Protestant form, although these were not
for performance in Catholic Venice. The motets are similar in style to those of Nicolas Gombert, with dense textures, pervasive
imitation, and free treatment of the source material.

References and further reading


The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians , ed. Stanley Sadie. 20 vol. London, Macmillan Publishers Ltd.,
1980. ISBN 1-56159-174-2
Gustave Reese, Music in the Renaissance. New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1954. ISBN 0-393-09530-4
Eleanor Selfridge-Field, Venetian Instrumental Music, from Gabrieli toVivaldi. New York, Dover Publications, 1994.
ISBN 0-486-28151-5
External links
Free scores by Jacques Buusat the International Music Score Library Project(IMSLP)
Free scores by Jacques Buusin the Choral Public Domain Library(ChoralWiki)

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