Pierre de La Rue (born c. 1452, Tournai, Flanders [now in Belgium]—died November 20, 1518, Courtrai [now Kortrijk, Belgium]) was a composer in the Flemish, or Netherlandish, style that dominated Renaissance music, known for his religious music.
Little is known of La Rue’s early life. He may have worked first as a part-time singer in Brussels (1469), then perhaps in Ghent (1471–72) and Nieuwpoort (1472–77). From about 1492 he became a member of the chapel of the Habsburg-Burgundian court, in which office he served Maximilian I, Philip the Handsome, and from 1508 Margaret of Austria, regent of the Netherlands; with them he visited France and Spain. In 1516 he became canon at Courtrai. La Rue left more than 30 masses and about 45 motets, distinguished by their densely compressed style and skillful structure. His 32 surviving secular pieces include vocal part-songs and instrumentally accompanied solos.