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Guillaume le Heurteur (also found under the form Guillaume Heurteur and Guillaume Hurteur) was a French composer of the Renaissance about whom very little is known. Also a canon and preceptor of the choirboys of the Collegiate church Basilica of Saint Martin, Tours as evidenced by the title page of a collection of motets published in the same year, Le Heurteur was the author of four masses, two Magnificats, twenty-one motets and twenty-three songs, published between 1530 and 1549, mainly by Pierre Attaingnant, printer in Paris. Very little information is available on Guillaume le Heurteur. His name is quoted by François Rabelais in the second prologue to the Le Quart Livre, published in 1552, alongside those of Josquin des Prés, Pierre de La Rue and Jean Mouton. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
Kortholt - Bicinium (Mon petit cueur) from Georg Rhaw's Bicinia gallica et latina, 1545
1012Recorder 8' consort - Chanson (Hellas! Amour) from Pierre Attaingnant's 2nd book of Chansons musicales, 1533
953Mirelaridon
184Or my rendez mon karolus
85Hellas ! Amour qui sçais certainement - Arr. for Guitar
86Par ung matin levé devant le jour - Arr. for Guitar
77Grace, vertu, bonté, beaulté, noblesse - Arr. for Guitar
78Quant je boy du vin claret - Arr. for Guitar
79Allons ung peu avant - Arr. for Guitar
610Je ne puis pas mon grant deul appaiser - Arr. for Guitar
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Instruments of Middle Age and Renaissance
Guillaume Le Heurteur: Chansons (Renaissance Series, Arr. for Guitar)
Instruments of the Middle Ages and Renaissance
Les Plaisirs D'Amour - Sixteenth Century Chansons From the French Provinces
Les Plaisirs Du Palais
Instruments of Renaissance
Les Plaisirs du Palais: Chansons à boire de la Renaissance
Les Plaisirs du Palais (Ensemble Clément Janequin)
Instruments of the Middle Ages
Chanson [Le Heurteur]
Anthologie de la chanson française de 1450 à 1550 (Mono Version)
La royalle: Music for Kings & Courtiers