1573 in music
Appearance
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Events
[edit]- Approximate formation date of the Florentine Camerata, at the salon of Count Giovanni de' Bardi (earliest record is January 14, 1573).
- Manuel Rodrigues Coelho becomes organist of Badajoz Cathedral.
Publications
[edit]- Giammateo Asola – Completorium per totum annum quatuorque illae Beatae Virginis antiphonae quae in fine pro anni tempore secundum Romanam curiam decantatur for six voices (Venice: Girolamo Scotto)
- Joachim a Burck – Sacrae cantiones plane novae (Entirely new sacred songs) for six voices (Nuremberg: Dietrich Gerlach)
- Ippolito Chamaterò – Psalms for eight voices (Venice: Girolamo Scotto)
- Giovanni Matteo Faà di Bruno – Salmi di David profeta con tre Magnificat for five, six, and eight voices (Venice: Antonio Gardano, sons)
- Giovanni Ferretti – First book of canzoni alla napolitana for six voices (Venice: Girolamo Scotto)
- Marc'Antonio Ingegneri – First book of masses for five and eight voices (Venice: Antonio Gardano, figliuoli)
- Paolo Isnardi – Masses for four voices (Venice: Antonio Gardano, figliuoli)
- Jacobus de Kerle
- Orlande de Lassus
- Patrocinium musices, part 1 (Munich: Adam Berg), a collection of motets
- Moduli for six, seven, and twelve voices (Paris: Le Roy & Ballard)
- Viersprachendruck for four voices (Munich: Adam Berg), containing six pieces each in Latin, German, French, and Italian
- Claudio Merulo – First book of masses for five voices (Venice: sons of Antonio Gardano)
- Philippe de Monte – Second book of motets for five voices (Venice: Girolamo Scotto)
- Annibale Padovano – First book of masses for five voices (Venice: sons of Antonio Gardano)
- Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina – Third book of motets for five, six, and eight voices (Venice: Girolamo Scotto)
- Leonhard Päminger – two collections of motets published posthumously in Nuremberg by his sons
- Costanzo Porta – Third book of madrigals for five voices (Venice: sons of Antonio Gardano)
- Cipriano de Rore – Sacrae cantiones (pub. by Petrus Phalesius the Elder)
Births
[edit]- January 31
- Ambrosius Metzger, German composer and Meistersinger
- Giulio Cesare Monteverdi (baptized), Italian composer, younger brother of Claudio Monteverdi (d. 1630-31).
- February 22 – Gemignano Capilupi, Italian composer
- July 19 (baptized) – Inigo Jones, English stage designer and architect (d. 1652)
- date unknown
- Francesco Colombini, Italian composer and organist
- Benedikt Faber, German composer
- Juan de Palomares, Spanish composer and guitarist
- Alessandro Striggio the younger, Italian composer (d. 1630).
- probable – Géry de Ghersem, Flemish composer and singer (d. 1630)
- Cesarina Ricci de Tingoli, Italian composer.
Deaths
[edit]- March 15 (or earlier) – Christopher Tye, English composer (b. c. 1505)
- November 17 – Joannes Pionnier, French composer
- December 7 – John Thorne, English composer and poet
- December 27 – December 31 – Firmin Lebel, French chorus director and composer
- date unknown
- Johannes Claux, Flemish composer
- Melchior Kreisstein, German music printer
- Gislain Manilius, Flemish music printer
- Petrus Phalesius the Elder, Flemish music publisher
- probable – Alfonso dalla Viola, Italian composer and instrumentalist