Johannes Pullois


Johannes Pullois was a Franco-Flemish composer of the Renaissance, active in both the Low Countries and Italy. He was one of the early generation of composers to carry the Franco-Flemish polyphonic style from its home region in the Netherlands to Italy.
He was probably born in Pulle, near Antwerp, but nothing is known about his life until he became zangmeester at the church of Our Lady in Antwerp in 1443. He unsuccessfully auditioned with Philip the Good for the Burgundian court chapel, but was not accepted for a position; he then in 1447 went to Rome, where he sang in the papal chapel until 1468. He returned to Antwerp, becoming residential canon at the same church at which he had worked in the 1440s, and he died there in 1478. During his career he was a colleague of both Johannes Philibert and the renowned Johannes Ockeghem.

Music and influence

One complete cyclic mass has survived, a Missa sine nomine, for three voices; most likely dating from the 1450s, it is one of the earliest cyclic masses to be written on the continent. It shows such influence of English music that it has been mistaken for the work of an anonymous English composer. The mass displays a complex transmission pattern, which has confused its dating and provenance.
Pullois also wrote a motet for the Christmas season Flos de spina, which is similar stylistically to works by Ockeghem, and may have been written during his time in Italy. One other motet, Victime paschali laudes, and three sacred contrafacta of secular songs have survived.
He also wrote 14 secular songs which appear in various sources from Italy as well as Germany.

Works

Masses and mass fragments

  1. Missa sine nomine
  2. Gloria

    Motets

  3. Flos de spina
  4. Globus igneus
  5. O beata Maria
  6. Resone unice genito
  7. Victime paschali laudes,

    Secular

  8. De ma dame
  9. He n'esse pas
  10. Je ne puis
  11. La bonté du Saint Esperit
  12. Le serviteur
  13. Les larmes,
  14. Op eenen tijd, 3 voices
  15. Pour prison,
  16. Pour toutes fleurs,
  17. Puisque fortune
  18. Quelque cose
  19. Quelque langage,
  20. Se ung bien peu,
  21. So lanc so meer,