La Tròba : Anthologie chantée des troubadours : XIIème et XIIIème siècles
Marcabru (fl. 1130-1150) is one of the earliest troubadours whose poems are known. There is no certain information about him; the two vidas attached to his poems tell different stories, and both are evidently built on hints in the poems, not on independent information. According to the brief life in MS. BNF 12473 Marcabrun was from Gascony (details of the dialect of his poems support this) and was the son of a poor woman named Marcabruna. He made bad poems and bad satires, and spoke evil of women and of love. This evidently comes from a reading of poem 293,18. According to the longer biography in MS. Vat. Lat. 5232 Marcabru was abandoned at a rich man's door, and no one knew his origin. He was brought up by Aldric del Vilar, learned to make poetry from Cercamon, was at first nicknamed Pan-perdut and later Marcabru. He became famous, and the lords of Gascony, about whom he had said many bad things, eventually put him to death. This appears to be based on poems 16b,1 and 293,43 (an exchange between Aldric del Vilar and Marcabru) and guesswork; the link with Cercamon is doubted by modern scholars. Forty-five poems are attributed to Marcabru, learned, often difficult, sometimes obscene, relentlessly critical of the morality of lords and ladies. He experimented with the pastorela, which he uses to point out the futility of lust. One tells of how the speaker's advances are reviled by a shepherdess on the basis of class. Another tells of how a man's attempt to seduce a woman whose husband was at the crusades is firmly rebuffed. He may also have originated the tenso in a debate with Uc Catola (as early as 1133) on the nature of love and the decline of courtly behaviour.[3] Marcabru was a powerful influence on later poets who adopted the obscure trobar clus style. Among his patrons were William X of Aquitaine and, probably, Alfonso VII of León. Marcabru may have travelled to Spain in the entourage of Alfonso Jordan, Count of Toulouse, in the 1130s. In the 1140s he was a propagandist for the Reconquista and in his famous poem with the Latin beginning Pax in nomine Domini! he called Spain a lavador (washer) where knights could go to have their souls cleansed fighting the infidel. Four monophonic melodies to accompany Marcabru's poetry survive; additionally, three melodies of poems that may be contrafacta of Marcabru's work may be attributed to him. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
Marcabru (fl. 1130-1150) is one of the earliest troubadours whose poems are known. There is no certain information about him; the two vidas attached to his poems tell different stories, and both are evidently built on hints in the poems, not on independent information. According to the brief life in MS. BNF 12473 Marcabrun was from Gascony (details of the dialect of his poems support this) and was the son of a poor woman named Marcabruna. He made bad poems and bad satires, and spoke evil of women and of love. This evidently comes from a reading of poem 293,18. According to the longer biography in MS. Vat. Lat. 5232 Marcabru was abandoned at a rich man's door, and no one knew his origin. He was brought up by Aldric del Vilar, learned to make poetry from Cercamon, was at first nicknamed Pan-perdut and later Marcabru. He became famous, and the lords of Gascony, about whom he had said many bad things, eventually put him to death. This appears to be based on poems 16b,1 and 293,43 (an exchange between Aldric del Vilar and Marcabru) and guesswork; the link with Cercamon is doubted by modern scholars. Forty-five poems are attributed to Marcabru, learned, often difficult, sometimes obscene, relentlessly critical of the morality of lords and ladies. He experimented with the pastorela, which he uses to point out the futility of lust. One tells of how the speaker's advances are reviled by a shepherdess on the basis of class. Another tells of how a man's attempt to seduce a woman whose husband was at the crusades is firmly rebuffed. He may also have originated the tenso in a debate with Uc Catola (as early as 1133) on the nature of love and the decline of courtly behaviour.[3] Marcabru was a powerful influence on later poets who adopted the obscure trobar clus style. Among his patrons were William X of Aquitaine and, probably, Alfonso VII of León. Marcabru may have travelled to Spain in the entourage of Alfonso Jordan, Count of Toulouse, in the 1130s. In the 1140s he was a propagandist for the Reconquista and in his famous poem with the Latin beginning Pax in nomine Domini! he called Spain a lavador (washer) where knights could go to have their souls cleansed fighting the infidel. Four monophonic melodies to accompany Marcabru's poetry survive; additionally, three melodies of poems that may be contrafacta of Marcabru's work may be attributed to him. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
L'Autrier Jost'un Sebissa
Pax in nomine Domini!
L'autrier jost'una sebissa
Pax in nomine Domini
Lo vers comens
Vida
Palestina
L'autrier, just una sebissa
L'autrier (Pastourelle)
L'autrier, just'una sebissa
Emperaire, Per Mi Mezeis
L'autrier una sebissa
Canto De Cruzada "Pax In Nomine Domini" (I. Trovadores de Alfonso VII, El Emperador)
Danza 1 De La Conquista De Almería (Cantiga 353) (I. Trovadores de Alfonso VII, El Emperador)
Nota sebissa
Dirai vos senes duptansa
L'autrier, just' una sebissa
Cluck old hen
Canto de cruzada "Emperaire, Per Mi Rezeis" (Emperador, Por Mi Propio Impulso…) (I. Trovadores de Alfonso VII, El Emperador)
Bel m'es quan sunt li fruit madur
Pax in Nomine Domini!, for consort
Lo vers comensa
Deus Lo Vult: Pax in Nominee Domini
Strade
Bel m'es quan li fruch madur
Pax! In Nomine Domini
L'autrier jost'una sebiss
L'autrier, a l'essida d'abriu
Stelle in terra
Lo vers comens quan vei del fau
Marcabru: Pax in nomine Domini!
L'autre ier a l'eissida d'abriu
Pax in Nomine Domini! [Paris, Bibl. Nat., fr. 844]
L'autrier jost' una sebissa
Planctus "Pax! in nomini Domini!"
Dirai Vos Senes Doptansa
Ricordo
Fiaccole vive
La notte guarda
Bel M'es Quan Son Li Frug Madur
L'autrier just'una sebissa
Chapel Train
Spinta ritmica
L' autrier just' una sebissa
Bagliori
Occhi socchiusi
Blake's Divine Light
Tai Fun
Crusaders' Song: Pax in nomine Domini
Bel m'es quan son li fruich madur
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