Cantiones Sacrae (Schütz)
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Cantiones Sacrae (Schütz)
Cantiones sacrae or Sacrae cantiones (Latin for "Sacred songs") may refer to: *''Sacrae cantiones for four, five, six or more voices'', 1573 works by Alexander Utendal *'' Cantiones quae ab argumento sacrae vocantur'', a 1575 collection by William Byrd and Thomas Tallis *''Cantiones sacrae'', 1589 and 1591 works by William Byrd *''Sacrae cantiones liber primus'', 1592 works by Tiburtio Massaino Tiburzio Massaino (also Massaini and Tiburtio) (Cremona, before 1550 – Piacenza or Lodi, after 1608) was an Italian composer. Life He was an Augustinian friar in Piacenza. He became ''maestro di cappella'' at S Maria del Popolo in Rome in ... * ''Cantiones sacrae'' (Gesualdo), two collections of motets of Carlo Gesualdo da Venosa published in 1603 *''Sacrae cantiones'', 1614 works by Vincenzo Ugolini * ''Cantiones sacrae'' (Schütz), a 1625 collection of forty different pieces of vocal sacred music by Heinrich Schütz * '' Sacred Songs'', a 1980 album by Daryl Hall {{disambig ...
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Alexander Utendal
Alexander Utendal (1543/45 – 7 May 1581) was a Flemish composer. Life Utendal was a native of Ghent, nowadays a Belgian city, but at the time part of Flanders and the Netherlands which were part of the Holy Roman Empire. Like many Flemish musicians and composers of his time, he served the Imperial family, the Habsburgs. He began already at a young age as a choirboy at the court of Mary of Hungary, sister of emperors Charles V and Ferdinand I of the Holy Roman Empire. She was given the position of Vogt (regent) of the Netherlands. In 1564, Utendal became alto of the court chapel of Archduke Ferdinand II of Tyrol, another member of the royal Habsburg family. After Ferdinand was made Archduke of Further Austria in 1564 after his father's death, he moved his court from Prague (he was the governor of Bohemia) to Innsbruck. Utendal followed his master to the Innsbruck court chapel to gain the position of vice chapel master in 1572 (as successor of Jacob Regnart); he was als ...
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Cantiones Quae Ab Argumento Sacrae Vocantur
William Byrd (; 4 July 1623) was an English Renaissance composer. Considered among the greatest composers of the Renaissance, he had a profound influence on composers both from his native country and on the Continent. He is often considered along with John Dunstaple and Henry Purcell as one of England's most important composers of early music. Byrd wrote in many of the forms current in England at the time, including various types of sacred and secular polyphony, keyboard (the so-called Virginalist school), and consort music. He produced sacred music for Anglican services, but during the 1570s became a Roman Catholic, and wrote Catholic sacred music later in his life. Life Birth and background Richard Byrd of Ingatestone, Essex, the paternal grandfather of Thomas Byrd, probably moved to London in the 15th century. Thereafter succeeding generations of the Byrd family are described as gentlemen. William Byrd was probably born in London, the third surviving son of Thomas Byrd a ...
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Tiburtio Massaino
Tiburzio Massaino (also Massaini and Tiburtio) (Cremona, before 1550 – Piacenza or Lodi, after 1608) was an Italian composer. Life He was an Augustinian friar in Piacenza. He became ''maestro di cappella'' at S Maria del Popolo in Rome in 1571. He moved to Modena in 1578, Lodi in 1580 and Salò in 1587 before arriving at Innsbruck in the service of Archduke Ferdinand II in 1589-1590. He is registered then in Salzburg in 1591; in Prague where he met Philippe de Monte till 1594 when he left for Piacenza and Cremona. He was again in Piacenza in 1598 before being ''maestro di cappella'' in Lodi (1600–1608). Adriano Banchieri Adriano Banchieri ( Bologna, 3 September 1568 – Bologna, 1634) was an Italian composer, music theorist, organist and poet of the late Renaissance and early Baroque eras. He founded the Accademia dei Floridi in Bologna. Biography He w ... reports he was ''maestro di cappella'' in Piacenza in 1609. Works Sacred works *Concentus in univer ...
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Cantiones Sacrae (Gesualdo)
The ''Sacrae Cantiones'' of Carlo Gesualdo da Venosa are two collections of motets published in 1603. The first volume consists of 19 motets for 5 voices, the second volume of 20 motets for 6 or 7 voices. The bassus and sextus (sixth part) of the second volume are lost, but were reconstructed by musicologist James Wood from 2008 to 2011 and recorded by Wood's Vocalconsort Berlin in August 2011. Motet list Sacrarum cantionum quinque vocibus Liber primus, Napoli, Costantino Vitale, 1603 # O vos omnes # Domine, ne despicias deprecationem meam # Sancti Spiritus, Domine # Exaudi, Deus, deprecationem meam # Venit lumen tuum # Illumina faciem tuam # Maria, Mater gratiae # Precibus et meritis # Ave, dulcissima Maria # Dignare me laudare te #Ave Regina cœlorum #Hei mihi Domine #Tribulationem et dolorem #Peccantem me quotidie #Reminiscere miserationum tuarum #Tribularer si nescirem #Laboravi in gemitu meo #Deus, refugium et virtus #O Crux benedicta Sacrarum cantionum liber primus, 1603 ...
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Vincenzo Ugolini
Vincenzo Ugolini (Perugia, 1 November 1578 - Rome, 6 May 1638) was an Italian composer of the early Baroque era and of the Roman School. Life Born in Perugia, he was first a ''puer chori'' (boy soprano) at San Luigi dei Francesi in Rome under Giovanni Bernardino Nanino; then he was engaged as a contralto until July 1594 and as a bass from the beginning of May 1600 until the end of 1601. In 1603 he was ''mastro di capella'' of Santa Maria Maggiore, in Rome. After an illness in 1606, he left this work in 1609 and became ''maestro'' at the Duomo of Benevento. This position he held until 1615, with a hiatus in 1614 where he worked for Cardinal Arrigoni in Rome. From 2 July 1616 he turned to San Luigi dei Francesi holding the same positions, and in 1620 he succeeded Francesco Soriano as ''maestro'' of the Cappella Giulia at San Pietro. During this time he also tutored the mezzo-soprano singer Marc'Antonio Pasqualini. In 1629 he was deponent for the testament of the composer Domenico ...
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Cantiones Sacrae (Schütz)
Cantiones sacrae or Sacrae cantiones (Latin for "Sacred songs") may refer to: *''Sacrae cantiones for four, five, six or more voices'', 1573 works by Alexander Utendal *'' Cantiones quae ab argumento sacrae vocantur'', a 1575 collection by William Byrd and Thomas Tallis *''Cantiones sacrae'', 1589 and 1591 works by William Byrd *''Sacrae cantiones liber primus'', 1592 works by Tiburtio Massaino Tiburzio Massaino (also Massaini and Tiburtio) (Cremona, before 1550 – Piacenza or Lodi, after 1608) was an Italian composer. Life He was an Augustinian friar in Piacenza. He became ''maestro di cappella'' at S Maria del Popolo in Rome in ... * ''Cantiones sacrae'' (Gesualdo), two collections of motets of Carlo Gesualdo da Venosa published in 1603 *''Sacrae cantiones'', 1614 works by Vincenzo Ugolini * ''Cantiones sacrae'' (Schütz), a 1625 collection of forty different pieces of vocal sacred music by Heinrich Schütz * '' Sacred Songs'', a 1980 album by Daryl Hall {{disambig ...
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