de Vitry, Phillipe (1291-1361)
Phillipe de Vitry was one of the most important composers
involved with Medieval music. He was the author of a prominent music
theory text, called the Ars Nova. In this work, he showed how he would
like to expand the rhythmic resources offered to composers, introduced
new rhythmic schemes and a new mensural notation system. This new system
remained an important notational device for over a century after his
death. He made the first use of binary rhythm and is thus considered to
be a mathematical and philosophical genius of his time period.
Additionally, he is credited with being one of the main developers of
the
motet. He is one of the first composers to discover and use
isorhythm; a single rhythmic figure continually repeated by a voice.
The only surviving works of Phillipe de Vitry were his motets.
They are mostly secular, although some took on religious tones. Most of
his motets were on political, as opposed to romantic, topics. He wrote
his secular pieces in Latin, instead of French. He was seen as a
prodigy, as he wrote about the issues of his time period and put them
into musical form. Vitry is hailed today for his music theory that
spurned the whole Ars Nova era of the Medieval era and for his own
emotional motets. He used new modes of musical idiom that would not be
refined until years after his death. He left a lasting impression on the
musical world.