It is hard to imagine a musical repertory of more astonishing refinement than the one cultivated at the 15th-century Burgundian courts of Philip the Good and his successor, Charles the Bold. These courts were home to the most esteemed composers of the century, a roster that included among its many members Guillaume Dufay, Binchois, Hayne van Ghizeghem, Nicolas Grenon, Robert Morton, and Jean Molinet.
While these composers often excelled in sacred musical compositions, it was their French chansons that proliferated more than any other genre in courtly circles throughout Western and Central Europe. This is a testament not only to the preference for French song over other vernacular genres of the time but also to the widespread eminence of Burgundian culture more generally. The high quality of the musical settings by these composers was paired with a long-cultivated tradition of courtly love poetry that knew no contemporary equal.
Perhaps this legacy has paled over time in comparison with the more infamous complexities of the preceding ars subtilior or the popularization music attained through print in the 16th century. Recordings of the 15th-century repertory often sound pedantic or even cumbersome, while live performances remain rare. On Sunday, at St. John the Evangelist Episcopal Church in San Francisco, Fortune's Wheel made a persuasive case for a new approach to this music in its San Francisco Early Music Society concert, titled "Amoureux suy: Love and Longing in Burgundy ca. 1450."
Most of these 15th-century chansons were written for three parts, many for four. Rather than allot each part to an individual singer, Fortune's Wheel presented this music most often with the top two lines sung by Lydia Knutson and Aaron Sheehan while filling out the bottom lines with vielle (medieval fiddle) or harp or a combination of these instruments performed by Shira Kammen and Robert Mealy. The approach aligned well with pictorial evidence from the period, which suggests some instrumental accompaniment, but, more important, sounded absolutely convincing in performance.
Kammen and Mealy performed the instrumental parts in accordance with performance practices as we have long understood them to be, with divisions and ornamentations that breathed life into the unadorned lines transmitted in the manuscript sources. The result was a rhythmically propulsive supporting texture for the top vocal parts. The instrumentalists also showcased their skills in two animated vielle duets, one a basse dance titled La Franchoise nouvelle and the other an adaptation of the famous basse dance tune La Spagna. Their lively interactions on stage mirrored the spontaneity of their performance, with supple yet densely interwoven polyphonic lines propelled forward by the rapid unfolding of hemiola and syncopation.