- Adam de la Halle
Adam de la Halle, also known as Adam le Bossu (Adam the Hunchback) (1237?-1288) was a French-born
trouvère ,poet andmusician , who broke with the long-established tradition of writing liturgical poetry and music to be an early founder of seculartheater in France. He was a member of theConfrérie des jongleurs et bourgeois d'Arras .Adam's other nicknames, "le Bossu d'Arras" and "Adam d'Arras", suggest that he came from Arras, France. The sobriquet "the
Hunchback " was probably a family name; Adam himself points out that he was not one. [Robert Falck, "Adam de la Halle," s.v., "Grove Music Online" [http://www.grovemusic.com] (subscription access), visited 25 March 2007.] His father,Henri de le Hale , was a well-known Citizen of Arras, and Adam studiedgrammar ,theology , andmusic at theCistercian abbey ofVaucelles , nearCambrai . Father and son had their share in the civil discords in Arras, and for a short time took refuge inDouai . Adam had been destined for the church, but renounced this intention, and married a certain Marie, who figures in many of his songs, "rondeaux ",motet s and "jeux-partis ". Afterwards he joined the household ofRobert II, count of Artois ; and then was attached toCharles of Anjou , brother of Charles IX, whose fortunes he followed inEgypt ,Syria ,Palestine , andItaly .At the court of Charles, after Charles became king of
Naples , Adam wrote his "Jeu de Robin et Marion ", the most famous of his works. Adam's shorter pieces are accompanied by music, of which a transcript in modern notation, with the original score, is given in Coussemaker's edition. His "Jeu de Robin et Marion" is cited as the earliest French play with music on a secular subject. Thepastoral , which tells how Marion resisted the knight, and remained faithful to Robert the shepherd, is based on an oldchanson , "Robin m'aime, Robin m'a". It consists of dialogue varied by refrains already current in popular song. The melodies to which these are set have the character offolk music , and are more spontaneous and melodious than the more elaborate music of his songs and motets. Fétis considered "Le Jeu de Robin et Marion" and "Le Jeu de la feuillée" forerunners of thecomic opera . [François-Joseph Fétis, "Revue Musicale" 1.1, 1827. ] An adaptation of "Le Jeu Robin et Marion", byJulien Tiersot , was played at Arras by a company from the ParisOpéra-Comique on the occasion of a festival in 1896 in honour of Adam de le Hale.His other play, "Le jeu Adan" or "Le jeu de la Feuillee" (ca. 1262), is a satirical drama in which he introduces himself, his father and the citizens of Arras with their peculiarities. His works include a "
conge ", or satirical farewell to the city of Arras, and an unfinished "chanson de geste " in honour of Charles of Anjou, "Le roi de Sicile", begun in 1282; another short piece, "Le jeu du pelerin", is sometimes attributed to him.His known works include thirty-six chansons (literally, "songs"), forty-six "
rondets de carole ", eighteen "jeux-partis", fourteen "rondeaux ", fivemotet s, one "rondeau-virelai ", one "ballette ", one "dit d'amour ", and one "congé".Notes
Example
Recording
*2004 – Zodiac.
Ars Nova andArs Subtilior in the Low Countries and Europe"Capilla Flamenca . Eufoda 1360.References
*1911
*The only manuscript which contains the whole of Adam's work is the La Valliere manuscript. (No. 25,566) in theBibliotheque Nationale ,Paris , dating from the latter half of the 13th century.
*Many of his pieces are also contained in Douce manuscript 308, in theBodleian Library ,Oxford .
*"Oeuvres completes" (1872), edited by E. de Coussemaker.
*article by Paulin Paris in: "Histoire litteraire de La France" (vol. xx. pp. 638-675)
*G. Raynaud, "Recueil des motets francais des XIIe et XIIIe siecles" (1882)
*"Canchons et Partures des... Adan delle Hale", a critical edition by Rudolf Berger,(Halle, 1900)
*The edition of Adam's two jeux in: Monmerque and Michel's "Theatre francais au moyen age" (1842)
*Ernest Langloi s, "Le jeu de Robin et Marion" (1896), with a translation in modern French
*"A Guesnon, La Satire a Arras au XIIIe, siecle" (1900)
*A full bibliography of works on the subject in: No. 6 of the "Bibliotheque de bibliographies critiques", by Henri Guy.
*Recent French ed. of complete works: edited by Pierre-Yves Badel (Paris: Livre de poche, 1995) (ISBN 2-253-06656-7)External links
* [http://www.arlima.net/ad/adam_de_la_halle.html Archives de littérature du Moyen Âge (Arlima)] A complete online bibliography of Adam de la Halle and his works
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