Jean Richafort
50 top tracks
Jean Richafort
50 top tracks
Albums

Richafort: Requiem
Jean Richafort

Requiem in memoriam Josquin Desprez
Jean Richafort

Jean Richafort: Requiem - Tributes to Josquin Desprez
Jean Richafort

La Vihuela
Jean Richafort

Francesco da Milano: Il divino
Jean Richafort

Magnificat - Beautiful and Calming Choral Music
Jean Richafort

Money Powers Music
Jean Richafort

Jean Richafort: Missa O Genitrix - Missa Veni Sponsa Christi
Jean Richafort

Bakfark: Complete Works for Lute (The Lyons Lute Book, The Krakow Lute Book and Miscellanea)
Jean Richafort

Il Divino (Music from the World of Francesco da Milano)
Jean Richafort

Chapelle du Roi, Music for Philip of Spain
Jean Richafort
![Richafort: Requiem in memoriam Josquin Desprez; Motets [Huelgas Ensemble/Paul van Nevel] — cover art by Jean Richafort](/frogtoon_logo.png)
Richafort: Requiem in memoriam Josquin Desprez; Motets [Huelgas Ensemble/Paul van Nevel]
Jean Richafort
Biography
Jean Richafort (c. 1480 – c.1547) was a Franco-Flemish composer of the Renaissance....Read more on Last.fm
Read more
Jean Richafort (c. 1480 – c.1547) was a Franco-Flemish composer of the Renaissance.
He was probably born in Hainault, and his native language appears to have been French. He may have studied with Josquin Desprez, though the evidence for this is circumstantial. Richafort served as choir master at St. Rombold cathedral in Mechelen between 1507 and 1509, and at St. Gilles church in Bruges between 1542 and 1547—leaving a huge gap in the record of his activity. At some time between these dates he was associated with the French royal chapel, since some of his music is for official occasions connected with Louis XII, and there is some evidence he may have been in Brussels in 1531 in the service of Queen Mary of Hungary, who was regent there.
Musically, Richafort was a representative of the first generation after Josquin, and he followed his style in many ways. In some of his music he used fragments of Josquin's compositions as a tribute. Techniques used by Richafort include are typical of the period, such as smooth polyphony and pervasive imitation, but he was unusually attentive to the clear setting of text so the words could be understood.
He wrote a requiem for six voices (Requiem in memoriam Josquin Des Prez, 1532), masses, motets, settings of the Magnificat, two secular motets, and chansons. <a href="https://www.last.fm/music/Jean+Richafort">Read more on Last.fm</a>. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
