- Johannes Martini
Johannes Martini (c. 1440 – late 1497 or early 1498) was a Franco-Flemish
composer of the Renaissance.Life
He was born in Brabant around 1440, but information about his early life is scanty. He probably received his early training in
Flanders , as did most of the composers of his generation. Sometime before 1473 he became associated with the ducal chapel inFerrara ,Italy , whereErcole I d'Este was attempting to build a musical establishment on the par of some of the other aristocratic centers in Italy.He was a member of the famous
Milan chapel of theSforza family in July 1474, along withLoyset Compère ,Gaspar van Weerbeke , and some of the other composers from northern Europe who were part of the first wave of Franco-Flemish influence in Italy. In November he returned to Ferrara. What prompted him to leave and return is not known, but since the Milanese chapel was then the most renowned in Europe, it is possible he went to investigate the competition for his employer as much as to improve his own singing and compositional skill. However he must have returned to Milan, since he is listed along withJean Japart ,Colinet de Lannoy , andLoyset Compère , to be given a safe pass for exit from Milan on February 6, 1477, following the 1476 assassination of DukeGaleazzo Maria Sforza . [Fitch, Grove online]Martini was well-rewarded by his employer, receiving not only an unusually large salary for his position in the chapel, but his own house in Ferrara.
In 1486 he traveled to
Hungary as part of the group from Ferrara involved in the installation of a d'Este asArchbishop ofEsztergom , and in 1487 and 1488 he made two separate trips to Rome to negotiate the benefices given to him by Duke Ercole.Music and influence
Martini wrote masses,
motet s,psalm s,hymn s, and some secular songs, includingchanson s. His style is conservative, sometimes referring back to the music of theBurgundian School , especially in the masses. Some stylistic similarity to Obrecht suggests that the two may have known each other, or at the very least Martini may have seen Obrecht's music. Obrecht was a guest in Ferrara in 1487, and his music is known to have circulated in Italy in the early 1480s.Some of the earliest examples of the
paraphrase mass are by Martini. His "Missa domenicalis" and "Missa ferialis", which have been tentatively dated to the 1470s at the earliest, use paraphrase technique in the tenor voice – the normal voice for carrying the cantus firmus – but also include the same melodic material in other voices at the start of points of imitation. The paraphrase technique was to become one of the predominant methods of mass composition in the early 16th century. [Burkholder, Grove]In addition to his mostly conservative output of masses, he is the first composer known to have set psalms for double choir singing antiphonally. This style, which was to become famous in
Venice under the direction ofAdrian Willaert seventy years later, seems to have had no influence at the time: yet it was a striking innovation.His secular music is in both French and Italian.
References and further reading
*Article "Johannes Martini", in "The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians", ed. Stanley Sadie. 20 vol. London, Macmillan Publishers Ltd., 1980. ISBN 1-56159-174-2
*J. Peter Burkholder: "Borrowing", Grove Music Online, ed. L. Macy (Accessed November 5, 2006), [http://www.grovemusic.com (subscription access)]
*Gustave Reese , "Music in the Renaissance". New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1954. ISBN 0-393-09530-4
*Fabrice Fitch: "Colinet de Lannoy", Grove Music Online, ed. L. Macy (Accessed June 30, 2007), [http://www.grovemusic.com (subscription access)]Notes
External links
*
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.