François Richard

François Richard (ca. 1585  1650) was a French composer of airs de cour.[1] His Airs de cour a quatre parties (1637) mentions the pleasure Louis XIII found in the music of his Chamber.[2]

Works, editions and recordings

gollark: What?
gollark: Yes.
gollark: There are several problems with what I have now: incorrect timings, meaning you sometimes dodge too late; the system not knowing your velocity due to the insane way MC handles this, making it impractical to determine what's going to hit you; the lack of any detection of obstacles meaning you could dodge into walls.
gollark: If I did, I would have implemented that, unless it was very hard.
gollark: I don't know how to.

References

  1. Georgie Durosoir L'air de cour en France: 1571-1655 1991 p294 "Parmi ces «petits maîtres» de l'air de cour, et bien qu'il n'en ait publié que deux livres, François Richard se distingue par la qualité de sa ... Ses deux livres d'airs de cour paraissent la même année, en 1637, chez Pierre Ballard."
  2. French baroque music from Beaujoyeulx to Rameau James R. Anthony - 1978 "François Richard (c. 1585-1650), in the dedication to Louis XIII found in his Airs de cour a quatre parties (1637), alluded to the pleasure the king took in the music of his Chamber: 'I know that after the sounds of the trumpets and drums, those of lute and voices do not displease you.”..."
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.