Jean de Bournonville was a French composer active in the first third of the 17th century, born in Noyon around 1585 and died in Paris on 27 May 1632. He should not be confused with his son Valentin de Bournonville, who published masses in the middle of the 17th century.
Biography
Noyon
The 1612 Octo Cantica state that he was born in Noyon, but his year of birth is unknown.
The same collection indicates him at that time as master of the children of the collegiate church of Saint-Quentin. In 1613 Bournonville offered to the chapter of the Cambrai Cathedral a bound collection of his masses. He remained in Saint-Quentin until about 1618. In the 1610s, he won first prizes at the puys de musique of Rouen, Évreux and Abbeville.
He ended his career at the Sainte-Chapelle du Palais in Paris, where he was appointed director of the master's degree on 6 December 1631, replacing Jacques Du Moustier who died on 6 December 1631. He took possession of his post on 3 January 1632, after taking an oath, and was installed "in the lower chairs on the right side, not having the order of priesthood". Offering such a position to a non-ecclesiastical musician was unusual; it can be inferred that it was his qualities that earned him such an offer. He did not work long, dying on 27 May 1632.
Legacy
He was also mentioned by Annibal Gantez, in 1643: comme un Bournonville qui est mort maistre de la Saincte Chapelle, et qui a laissé son fils aussi vertueux que luy maistre de l'Église d’Amiens. In addition to his son Valentin, he also had Artus Aux-Cousteaux as a student in Saint-Quentin in 1615.
Works
The known works of Bournonville are exclusively sacred and spiritual. They were well regarded by his contemporaries. In his writing, imitations are treated with flexibility and elegance. His counterpoint is of high quality and knows how to stay alive and spontaneous, as in the songs from which he sometimes draws inspiration for his masses.
Masses
There are nineteen of them, divided between Parisian volumes and a Douaisian collection.
Missa quatuor vocum. Ad imitationem moduli Ave maris stella. Paris: Pierre I Ballard, 1618. 1 vol. 2°. RISM B 3842, Guillo 2003 n° 1618-B.
Missa quatuor vocum. Ad imitationem moduli Ave Maria. Paris: Pierre I Ballard, 1618. 1 vol. 2°. Guillo 2016 n° 1618-B2.
Missæ tredecim, quarum ultima pro defunctis. Douai: Jean Bogard, 1619. 6 vol. 4° obl. RISM B 3843, Persoons 1989 n° 45.
Hymns and canticles
Octo cantica Virginis matris quae vulgo magnificat dicuntur, cum hymnis communioribus penè totius anni, quibus additae sunt Diei Dominicae & natalis Domini vesperae. Secundum rituum Romanum.. Paris : Pierre I Ballard, 1612. 4 vol. 4°. RISM B 3841, Guillo 2003 n° 1612-C.
Octo cantica Divæ Mariæ Virginis, quorum initium est Magnificat, secundum octo modos, seu tonos in templis decantari solitos singula quaternis vocibus constantia. Paris: Pierre I Ballard, 1614. 1 vol. 2°. Guillo 2016 n° 1614-D2.
Spiritual music
Cinquante quatrains du sieur de Pybrac, set in music in ii, iii & iiii parties. Paris: Pierre I Ballard, 1622. 4 vol. 8° obl. RISM B 3844, Guillo 2003 n° 1622-B.