1530s in music
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1520s . 1530s in music . 1540s |
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The decade of the 1530s in music (years 1530-1539) involved some significant compositions.
Events
- 1532: Thomas Tallis takes his first known musical appointment, as organist at Dover Priory.
- 1538: Tallis moves from Dover to Waltham Abbey.
Publications
1532
- Sebald Heyden – De arte canendi, first installment, important treatise on singing
1535
- Silvestro Ganassi dal Fontego – Opera intitulata Fontegara, published in Venice
- Philippe Verdelot – First book of madrigals a5.
1536
- Hans Neusidler – Two books of lute music, Ein newgeordent künstlich Lautenbuch and Der ander Theil des Lautenbuchs.
- Philippe Verdelot – Second book of madrigals a4.
1537
- Sebald Heyden – De arte canendi, second installment, important treatise on singing
1538
- Maddalena Casulana – First book of madrigals for Four Voices, published in Venice. It is the first printed book of music by a woman in history.
- Luis de Narváez – Los seys libros del Delphin, a large collection of lute music
- Philippe Verdelot – Second book of madrigals a5, and Le dotte, et eccellente compositioni....
- Ein Hubsch new Gesangbuch, the first Protestant hymn-book, published in Ulm.
1539
- Jacques Arcadelt – First book of madrigals a4.
Classical music
1530
- We-Liang-Hu composed music for a play by 14th-century poet Gao-Ming.
Sacred music
1533
- Nicolas Gombert – Cuis colis Ausoniam, motet for six voices to a text by Nicolaus Grudius, celebrating the treaty signed in Bologna by Emperor Charles V, Pope Clement VII, and several other Italian rulers
1539
- Johannes Heugel – Consolamini, popule meus, for eight voices, probably the earliest German composition for double choir[1]
Births
- 1530: Teodora Ginés, Dominican musician and composer (died 1598)
- 1531: Ercole Bottrigari, Italian scholar, mathematician, poet, music theorist, architect and composer (died 1612)
- 1532:
- March 25 - Pietro Pontio, Italian theorist and composer (died 1596)
- date unknown - Giammateo Asola, Italian composer (died 1609)
- probable – Orlando de Lassus aka Roland de Latre, Franco-Flemish composer of late Renaissance music (died 1594)
- c. 1530-40: Giorgio Mainerio, Italian composer (died 1582)
- 1533: Andrea Gabrieli, Italian composer and organist (died 1586)
- 1534: Lodovico Agostini, Italian composer (died 1590)
- 1535
- Giaches de Wert, Flemish composer of Italian madrigals (died 1596)
- probable – Innocentio Alberti, Italian instrumentalist and composer (died 1615)
- 1537: Johann Wanning, Dutch-born composer, kapellmeister and alto singer (died 1603)
- 1539
- December 20 – Paulus Melissus, writer and composer (died 1602)
Deaths
- 1536:
- May 17 - Mark Smeaton, English court musician, executed for alleged adultery with Anne Boleyn (born 1512)
- June 26 - Pierre Alamire, German-Dutch music copyist, composer, instrumentalist, mining engineer, merchant, diplomat and spy (born 1470)
- 1537: Paul Hofhaimer, Austrian composer and organist (born 1459)
- 1538:
- March – Hans Buchner, organist and composer, 54
- October – Maistre Jhan, composer (born c.1485)
- 1539:
- December 12 - Bartolomeo degli Organi, composer, singer and organist, 64
- December 20 - Johannes Lupi, composer (born c.1506)
References
- ↑ Wilfried Brennecke, "Heugel, Johannes", The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell (London: Macmillan Publishers, 2001).
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