These   modest  three-part  compositions,   to  which   we  may add the “Pleni  sunt    coeli”  and the
“Benedictus”    subsections of  the Sanctus,    were    epoch-makers.   Out of  earlier techniques  of  canon   and
voice-exchange  the composer    has worked  out a   manner  of  writing that    replaces    the cantus  firmus  (whether
held    out in  the tenor   or  paraphrased in  the superius)   with    a   series  of  “points of  imitation,” as  they    have
become  known   after   centuries   of  standardization.    Each    point   corresponds to  a   discrete    portion of  the text,
the parsing of  the words   thus    acquiring   a   far more    direct  role    in  the shaping of  the music   than    in  the
sections    of  the Mass    that    are built   over    the cantus  firmus—and  each    point   comes   to  a   full    cadential   close
before  proceeding  to  the next.   Beginning   with    the generation  of  Obrecht,    every   composer    of  Masses  and
motets  practiced   the “pervading  imitation”  style   when    not using   a   cantus  firmus. They    all learned it,
directly    or  indirectly, from    Busnoys.
In  the case    of  some    composers,  notably Obrecht,    the learning-and-modeling   process was
exceptionally   direct, testifying  to  the force   of  Busnoys’s   unsurpassed authority.  Obrecht studied Busnoys’s
Missa   L’Homme Armé    with    the same    assiduousness   he  applied to  the study   of  Ockeghem’s  Caput   Mass
and the anonymous   English Mass    before  it. Obrecht’s   Missa   L’Homme Armé    appropriates    Busnoys’s
tenor   note    for note;   and there   is  another Mass,   attributed  by  some    specialists to  Obrecht as  well,   that
appropriates    only    the rhythms of  Busnoys’s   tenor,  not the familiar    tune.   (In this    way the borrowing
becomes not only    more    hidden  but also    more    specifically    an  homage  to  Busnoys.)   In  such    a   case    the lines
of  dynastic    composerly  fealty  seem    even    stronger    and more    long-lasting    than    the lines   of  dynastic    political
fealty  that    spawned the original    tradition   of  emulation.
There   is  a   Missa   L’Homme Armé    by  Faugues that    quotes  the headmotive  of  Busnoys’s   Mass    in  its
Sanctus,    just    the way Obrecht had quoted  the headmotive  of  the English Caput   Mass    in  his Gloria. (At the
same    time,   of  course, Faugues made    sure    to  surpass his model   by  casting the cantus  firmus  as  a   canon   for
two voices  throughout  his Mass.)  Finally,    there   is  a   striking    moment  in  Busnoys’s   Sanctus where   the
superius    and altus   suddenly    drop    out,    leaving the tenor   exposed over    an  energetic   motive  in  the bassus
(Ex.    12-15a).    That    motive  was taken   over    by  a   whole   slew    of  followers   in  their   L’Homme Armé    Masses,
