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      Innovations in medieval music

      • Vitry is best known for his innovations in medieval music and for his significant contributions to the ars nova movement, which saw the development of new polyphonic techniques. He was also one of the first composers to use isorhythm, a method of organizing rhythmic patterns in music, which is still used today.
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  2. Philippe de Vitry (31 October 1291 – 9 June 1361) was a French composer-poet, bishop and music theorist in the ars nova style of late medieval music. An accomplished, innovative, and influential composer, he was widely acknowledged as a leading musician of his day, with Petrarch writing a glowing tribute, calling him: "... the keenest and ...

  3. Apr 15, 2024 · Philippe de Vitry (born Oct. 31, 1291, Paris, Fr.—died June 9, 1361, Meaux) was a French prelate, music theorist, poet, and composer. Vitry studied at the Sorbonne and was ordained a deacon at an early age. His earliest-known employment was as secretary to Charles IV.

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  4. www.musicacademyonline.com › composer › biographiesPhilippe de Vitry

    Philippe de Vitry was a composer and theorist whose work influenced the compositional practices of many subsequent generations. Perhaps most well known for a treatise on the “New Art” of his time, his motets also exhibit the earliest known use of isorhythm in the motet tenor .

  5. Philippe de Vitry (October 31, 1291 – June 9, 1361) was a French composer, music theorist and poet. He was an accomplished, innovative, and influential composer, who is credited to have been the author of the Ars Nova treatise, and is renowned as the great philosopher and truth seeker of his time.

  6. Philippe de Vitry was a renowned composer, poet, and music theorist who lived in the 14th century in France. He was born in Vitry-en-Artois, a town in the northern region of France, where his family held a prominent position.

  7. In his motets Vitry emerges as the first highly individual composer. Each work is a distinctive work of art, expresses personal ideas, and is characteristically shaped. The new techniques which Vitry embraced in his music he expounded in his famous treatise Ars nova (ca. 1320).

  8. VITRY, PHILIPPE DE. Medieval composer and theorist of great originality (also spelled Vitri); b. Vitry (Champagne), France, Oct. 31, 1291; d. Meaux, June 2, 1361. In addition to writing, Vitry served for some time as secretary to Charles IV and Philip VI of France, held several canonries, and eventually became bishop of Meaux.

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