This is Josquin’s setting of a text by Jean Molinet, a tribute upon the death of Johannes Ockeghem, another Franco-Flemish composer who may have been Josquin’s teacher. Near the end, Josquin is named among composers of his own generation - de la Rue, Brumel, and Compere - who “have lost your good father.” We know Josquin was raised by an aunt and uncle, and it seems possible that Ockeghem was in fact like the father he never knew. Or at least it’s easy to imagine so in this exquisite rendition.
This is Josquin’s setting of a text by Jean Molinet, a tribute upon the death of Johannes Ockeghem, another Franco-Flemish composer who may have been Josquin’s teacher. Near the end, Josquin is named among composers of his own generation - de la Rue, Brumel, and Compere - who “have lost your good father.” We know Josquin was raised by an aunt and uncle, and it seems possible that Ockeghem was in fact like the father he never knew. Or at least it’s easy to imagine so in this exquisite rendition.
Such great music, and they are making beautiful music together.
Wouw!
wonderful arrangement! so bad that the sound is too low for hearing the lute in all his glory
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Sorry, please tell me, is it possible to get the notes of this arrangement?