Music year 1514

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Further events

Music year 1514
Anne de Bretagne
Anne de Bretagne , Queen of France and great patron of the arts , dies on January 9th . Important musicians of the time worked in their court orchestra, Antonius Divitis , Jean Mouton , Claude de Sermisy and Jean Richafort .

Events

  • Martin Agricola , who initially worked on his parents' farm, began traveling in Eastern Germany in 1510. During this phase he acquires the basics of his musical knowledge as an autodidact . The stations of his journey are unknown; Frankfurt (Oder) and Leipzig probably belonged to them.
  • Bonifacius Amerbach , who initially studied at the Artistic Faculty of the University of Basel and listened to   music theory there, has continued his studies at the University of Freiburg im Breisgau since 1513 , where he turns to law . Here he is on friendly terms with Sixt Dietrich and the organist Hans Weck.
  • Hans Buchner is the cathedral organist at the Cathedral of Our Lady in Constance .
  • Marco Cara has been a lute virtuoso in the service of the Gonzaga family in Mantua since 1495 and until 1525 , who promoted artists of all kinds in his day.
  • Carpentras , who has been working for the papal chapel in Rome again since 1513 , becomes Kapellmeister, now under the Medici Pope Leo X , who is an avid patron of music and the arts.
  • Nicolas Champion is a member of Charles V's court orchestra . Here he has a high rank and is paid very well, even if he does not reach the rank of Pierre de la Rue . Through his good contacts and his services at court, he acquired a number of benefits in the cities of Bruges , Namur , Lens , Lier, Oostvoorne , Valenciennes , Geervliet and Brielle from 1508 to around 1520 .
  • Josquin Desprez has been provost at his former place of work in Condé-sur-l'Escaut since 1504 . He is referred to as monsieur le prevost messire Josse des pres . The position is attractive for the former music director not only for its local property ownership, but even more because of the good staffing the church and the quality of the local music exercise, second only to the cathedral in Cambrai and Saint-Vincent in Soignies exceeded becomes. The provost here (according to a list from 1523) holds the secular power in the parish and is the superior of the dean , the treasurer, 25 canons, 18 chaplains, 16 vicars and six choirboys, plus some priests without benefices; A choir of vicars and choirboys usually takes part in the lavishly designed church services, so that up to 22 music-trained voices are available and up to six-part works can be performed. Josquin Desprez worked in this position for 17 years until the end of his life.
  • Antonius Divitis is the singer in the court orchestra of the French Queen Anne de Bretagne , the wife of King Louis XII. of France (reign 1498–1515). After the queen's death on January 9, the chapel goes to King Ludwig XII. over. Divitis remains in his position in the court chapel.
  • Pedro de Escobar is Magister Puerorum at the cathedral in Seville until his resignation 1514th
  • Heinrich Finck is employed as a “capellmaister” or “singemeister” with an annual salary of 60 guilders at the Stuttgart court of Ulrich von Württemberg (term of office with interruptions from 1498 to 1550). He will be leaving the Württemberg court before 1515.
  • Lodovico Fogliano was the singer of the Cappella Giulia at St. Peter in Rome in 1513 and 1514 .
  • Lupus Hellinck is church servant at St. Donatian's in Bruges .
  • Paul Hofhaimer lives in Augsburg , the "secret capital" of Emperor Maximilian I , where he works as a freelancer under his favor.
  • Heinrich Isaac , who lives in Florence and is in the Habsburg service, becomes a well-paid “prepositus capelle cantus figuralis”.
  • Erasmus Lapicida is a singer and composer of religious songs at the court orchestra of the Palatinate Elector Ludwig V (reign 1508–1544) in Heidelberg until around 1520. Around this time Lapicida apparently also has connections to circles of the House of Habsburg , because he was in In 1514 he composed the motet "Sacerdos et pontifex" for the celebration of the election of Bernhard von Cles as Bishop of Trento and dedicated a poem of homage to him.
  • Jacotin Le Bel is likely in 1514 in the service of Cardinal i n as of Aragon , like take music history researcher.
  • Georg Liban , in 1511 Krakow of the academic degree Magister has acquired, gives lectures at the university and is about 1506 to 1528 at the School of St. Mary's Church as Kantor worked. He was first cantor here, from 1514 rector and teaches Latin prosody , Greek and music.
  • Jean l'Héritier occurs - after Duke Alfonso I . d'Este dismissed him from his service in Ferrara - into the service of Pope Leo X in Rome .
  • Johannes Lupi was accepted as a choirboy at the Notre-Dame Cathedral in his hometown of Cambrai in 1514 and was thus trained at one of the most important ecclesiastical music centers of the time.
  • Pierre Moulu composed after the death of the French Queen Anne de Bretagne the Chanson - motet e "Fiere Att ROPOS" , a lament about her death.
  • Jean Mouton is a member of the court orchestra of Queen Anne de Bretagne, the wife of King Louis XII. of France (reign 1498–1515). After the queen's death on January 9, the chapel goes to King Ludwig XII. over. Jean Mouton remains - like Antonius Divitis - in his position in the court chapel.
  • Anton Musa , who studied in Erfurt in 1506 and acquired his B acc alaureat here in 1507 , stayed in Erfurt again from 1514 and received his master's degree here in 1517 .
  • Marbrianus de Orto , who since 1510 premier chapela in the court orchestra of the regent Margaret e of Öste r rich in Brussels , is replaced in this office until 1517 with de Anthoine Berghes from. This change is related to residency obligations at other churches, after he worked as a canon at the Notre-Dame Cathedral in Antwerp (Church of Our Lady) from 1510 and in the same position at Saint-Gudule in Brussels from 1513.
  • Francisco de Peñalosa is a member of the Spanish Royal Chapel. Since 1511 he has also worked as a music teacher for the heir to the throne Ferdinand I; He served as a singer in the Spanish royal chapel until the king's death in 1516.
  • Georg Rhau acquired the academic degree of a baccalaureus on June 27, 1514 at the philosophical faculty in Wittenberg .
  • Jean Richafort probably since August 1509 Member of the chapel of the French queen A nne de Bretagne . He has had a benefice since November 1512 , which is in Brittany.
  • Pierre de la Rue is - like Nicolas Champion and Marbrianus de Orto - active in the court chapel of the regent Margaret of Austria in Brussels . The composer remained at the court of the governor in Mechelen until 1516 , whose favorite composer he became and in whose honor he wrote numerous occasional compositions.
  • Claudin de Sermisy acts as a clergyman in the D iözese Noy on and as a singer in the court chapel of Queen Anne of Brittany, the wife of King Louis XII. of France (reign 1498–1515). After the queen's death on January 9, the chapel goes to King Ludwig XII. over. Claudin de Sermisy remains - like Antonius Divitis and Jean Mouton - in his position in the court chapel.
  • Gaspar van Weerbeke , who had been the singer of the papal chapel in Rome since 1500 and at least until the end of 1515, joined the brotherhood Ca mpo Santo dei Teutonici e Fiamminghi in Rome in 1514 as Dominus Jasper Werbeke Cantor Capellae papalis .
    Funeral of Anne de Bretagne

Vocal works

Spiritually

  • Josquin Desprez - Missarum, Liber 3 : Sheet music and audio files in the International Music Score Library Project
    1. Missa Mater Patris : Sheet music and audio files in the International Music Score Library Project
    2. Missa Faisant regretz
    3. Missa ad fugam
    4. Missa Di dadi
    5. Missa de Beata Virgine
    6. Missa Sine nomine
  • Erasmus Lapicida - Sacerdos et pontifex to four votes
  • Jean Mouton
    • Motet O Maria piissima. Quis dabit oculis nostris to six voices, Cantus firmus Nativitas unde gaudia (Funeral motets for the death of Queen Anne de Bretagne on January 9, 1514)
    • Motet Quis dabit oculos nostris for four voices, 2nd part Ergo eiulate pueri (Funeral motets for the death of Anne de Bretagne)
  • Ottaviano Petrucci (Ed.) - Motetti de la corona, Liber 1 : Notes and audio files in the International Music Score Library Project
    1. Hylaive: Ascendens Christum in altum
    2. Carpentras : Bonitatem fecisti
    3. Antoine de Fevin : Benedictus Dominus Deus
    4. Jean Mouton : Beata dei genetrix Maria
    5. Eongheval ?: Benedicat nos imperialis
    6. Jean Mouton: Benedicta es celorum regina
    7. Jean Mouton: Christum regem regum
    8. Conta
    9. Jean Mouton: Celeste beneficium
    10. Josquin Desprez : Christum ducem speaks with
    11. Jean Mouton: Dilectus deo
    12. Jean Mouton: Ecce Maria genuit
    13. Jean Mouton: Egregie Christi confessor
    14. Jean Mouton: Gaude Barbara
    15. Antoine de Fevin: Gaude francorum regia
    16. de Silva: Letatus sum
    17. Jean Mouton: Laudate Deum in sanctis
    18. Jean Mouton: Laudate Dominum de celis
    19. Antoine Brumel : Memor esto
    20. Josquin Desprez: Nos qui vivimus
    21. Jean Mouton: Nobilis progenie
    22. Antoine de Févin: O desolatarum consolator
    23. Antonius Divitis
    24. P de Terache ?: Senatus apostolorum
    25. Antoine de Févin: Sancta trinitas unus deodorant
    26. Antoine de Févin: Tempus meum est
    27. Vulnerasti cor meum

Worldly

Born

Born around 1514

Anne de Bretagne

Died

Date of death secured

Died around 1514

See also

Portal: Music  - Overview of Wikipedia content on music