Speranza
Li Chantari di Lancelloto
Unlike the Tristan and Iseult legend, about which there are dozens of
13th-century songs (the Vienna Ms. alone has 15 strophic lays that tell the
story, for instance), it's not easy to think of anything about Lancillotto (other than the
Chrétien de Troyes "Lancelot", a prose composition), even though there may well be
a hoard of such songs somewhere.
Actually, we can only think of two songs by
Chrétien de Troyes: both are in the "Chansonnier de Noailles":
-- "D'amors qui m'a
tolu a moi' (which mentions Tristan, making it post-Arthurian) and
-- "Amors tençon
et bataille" (which could, we suppose, be part of the Lancelot story), for which
no music survives.
Then there's the Wikipedia link that will take one to the
source of much info about early Lancelot stuff.
Whether it leads ultimately to
musical sources is difficult to tell:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prose_Lancelot
The Lancelot and Tristan legends possess many similarities.
But unlike Lancelot, there is quite a lot of
Tristan music out there.
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