
Guillaume Legrant (Guillaume Lemacherier, Le Grant) (fl. 1405–1449) was a French composer of the early Renaissance, active in Flanders, Italy, and France. He was one of the first composers in writing polyphony to distinguish between passages for solo and multiple voices on each part. Nothing is known about his early life, but his real name (Lemacherier) suggests a French origin. His first appearance in church records is in 1405, when he was a singer at Bourges.
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Wilhelmus Legrant
Credo
Gabriel Fauré, MARIA, MATER GRATIAE
Wilhelmus Legrant (organ solo)
Guillaume Legrant, CREDO
Maurice Duruflé, TOTA PULCHRA ES
Las Je Ne Puis (Rondeau)
Gabriel Fauré MESSE BASSE, Sanctus
Pour l’amour de mon bel amy
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