Loys Bourgeois (born c. 1510, Paris, France—died after 1561) was a Huguenot composer who wrote, compiled, and edited many melodic settings of Psalms in the Genevan Psalter.
Little is known of Bourgeois’s early life. He moved to Geneva in 1541 and lived there until 1557, when he returned to Paris. He was a friend of John Calvin and lived with him from 1545 to 1557. Bourgeois was made a citizen of Geneva in 1547. In 1551 he was imprisoned for a day for tampering with the accepted Psalm tunes without authorization, but Calvin secured his release, and eventually Bourgeois’s alterations were approved.
Bourgeois based his Psalm settings on French texts by the celebrated poet Clément Marot and the leading theologian Theodore Beza. Though his harmonizations were not widely popular, the melodies he created were used by many later composers. Bourgeois used fragments of popular tunes and possibly also of liturgical chant in his melodies, the most familiar of which is Psalm 134, known as “Old Hundredth.” He was himself responsible for about 85 melodies in the Psalter, which was completed by his successors in 1562. Bourgeois also wrote Le Droict Chemin de musique (1550; The Direct Road to Music) in which he proposed an adaptation of traditional solmization.