The fiddle and harp were the most respectable, played by the troubadours and associated with courtly love. |
|
In the 13 th century, French troubadours wrote love-thwarted tales in a poetry-prose mix. |
|
Jacques Brel, a Belgian, was one of the great modern troubadours in the French language. |
|
The cult of the Virgin in the Middle Ages, he argues, led to the courtly love poets, the troubadours, idealising women in their writing. |
|
Both Provençal troubadours and contemporary rock and roll owe tremendous debts to African and Middle Eastern influences. |
|
The brilliant civilization of the Occitan troubadours lost its independence and, in 1271, the county of Toulouse fell into the royal domain. |
|
But troubadours also invented courtly love, love in space, in other words, love in the eyes. |
|
Provenal literature in the medieval period consisted chiefly of the lyric poetry composed by the troubadours for the feudal courts of the Midi, northern Italy, and Spain. |
|
Is David Wildstein joining this list of great New Jersey troubadours by singing to the U.S. Attorney? |
|
Under the vaulted gates and arched windows troubadours passed singing ballads by Hortantzis about the suffering of Erotokritos and Erophili. |
|
This poetry later exerted a strong influence on the art of the troubadours. |
|
Knights, princesses, beggards and troubadours... travel back to the Middle Ages, just for a weekend. |
|
The ensemble will explore and revisit the diverse music that the troubadours and trouvères would have played, sung and heard. |
|
He meets Simeon and Anna, symbols of the believing people, witnesses and troubadours of this manifestation. |
|
For his second album, Mr. West imported Jon Brion, invigorator of contemplative troubadours, to be as much collaborator as passport stamp. |
|
Loudon, Kate, Martha and Rufus are the bards of kith and kin, the troubadours of the consanguine. |
|
In the hands of these four troubadours, the entire history of chanson québécoise is brought to life before our very eyes. |
|
And I belong to the generation of troubadours for whom women were the very heart of song, prayer, desire. |
|
The presence of foreign musicians from the 12th century onwards is a sign that the music of the troubadours and the German Minnesinger was cultivated by the court. |
|
The troubadours no longer considered women to be the disposable assets of men. |
|
|
True, medieval troubadours sang of romantic love, but such sentiments had little to do with choosing a marriage partner. |
|
News of what scholars call the most famous scandal of 12 th century France spread through contemporary Europe by word of mouth, in poetry, and in the songs of troubadours. |
|
At the same time southern France gave birth to Occitan literature, which is best known for troubadours who sang of courtly love. |
|
Stroll along the beach where mariachis and troubadours will serenade you. |
|
The program is based on the dance songs, reverdies and pastourelles, composed by the poet-composers of northern France known as the trouvères, who inherited the tradition of their counterparts in the South, the troubadours. |
|
On the Saturday closest to the Winter Solstice, Katoomba's streets come alive with a vibrant parade of jugglers, gymnasts, musicians, dancers, choirs, troubadours, buskers, storytellers and poets. |
|
He patronised troubadours, and wrote lyric poetry in the troubadour tradition himself. |
|
Siamese troubadours and minstrels added more subplots and embellished scenes to the original storyline as time went on. |
|
As in the songs of the medieval troubadours, love ennobles you. |
|
Students, troubadours, panhandlers shoulder to shoulder. |
|
Alan Simon is one of those last great troubadours who never fear excess. |
|
It evokes the western African tradition of the griots, these hereditary troubadours who sing praises to the powerfuls, or who sing about love, everyday life, etc. |
|
Likewise, the graphic design, the musical themes and songs performed by Cuban troubadours provide an environment with outstanding aesthetic values. |
|
Gipsy troubadours start a festive dance in a glade. |
|
The troubadours were often itinerant, came from all classes of society, and wrote songs on a variety of topics, though with a particular focus on courtly love. |
|
In the manner of touring companies of the Renaissance, the clowns, street performers, minstrels, or troubadours travel from city to city to play their comedies. |
|
Troubadours and minstrels used to be homeless buskers, driven from city to city with the odd groat and a good bumming from Richard I being their only reward. |
|