1625 in music

List of years in music (table)
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The year 1625 in music involved some significant events.

Events

  • Jacques Gaultier becomes a musician at the court of King Charles I of England.[1]

Publications

  • Agostino Agazzari – Eucharisticum melos..., Op. 20 (Rome: Luca Antonio Soldi)
  • Adriano Banchieri
    • La sampogna musicale (The musical Syrinx) (Bologna: Girolamo Mascheroni)
    • Il principiante fanciullo (The beginning child) for two voices, Op. 46 (Venice: Bartolomeo Magni for Gardano), a collection of musical exercises for young singers
  • Manuel Cardoso – First book of masses for four, five, and six voices (Lisbon: Pedro Craesbeck)
  • Melchior Franck
    • Newes Musicalisches Opusculum for five voices (Coburg: Johann Forckel for Salomon Gruner), a collection of intradas
    • Gratulatio Musica for six voices (Coburg: Johann Forckel), a wedding motet for the jurist Johann Bechstedt
    • Geistliche Vermählung des Herrn Christi mit einer glaubigen Seel aus dem schönen Spruch Hoseæ 2 for six voices (Coburg: Johann Forckel), a wedding motet
  • Carlo Milanuzzi – Second book of sacra cetra concertata con affetti ecclesiastici for two, three, four, and five voices with organ, Op. 13 (Venice: Alessandro Vincenti), also includes arias for bass solo
  • Pietro Pace - The eleventh book of motets..., Op. 25 (Rome, Giovanni Battista Robletti), prepared posthumously by his son, Benedetto Pace
  • Giovanni Picchi – Canzoni da sonar con ogni sorte d'istromenti for two, three, four, six, and eight voices with basso continuo (Venice: Alessandro Vincenti)
  • Hieronymus Praetorius – Cantiones novae officiosae for five, six, seven, eight, ten, and fifteen voices, Op. 5 (Hamburg: Michael Hering)

Classical music

  • Alessandro Grandi – O quam tu pulchra es, a concertato motet[2]

Opera

  • Francesca Caccini – La liberazione di Ruggiero[3]

Births

  • December 24 – Johann Rudolph Ahle, organist and composer (d. 1673)[4]

Deaths

  • January 7 – Ruggiero Giovannelli, Italian composer (born c.1560)[5]
  • June 5 – Orlando Gibbons, composer (born 1583)[6]
  • July 5 – Cornelis Verdonck, composer (born 1563)[7]
  • October 1 – Hendrik Speuy, organist and composer (born c.1575)
  • November 3 – Adam Gumpelzhaimer, composer and music theorist (born 1559)[8]
  • date unknown – Muthu Thandavar, Carnatic composer (born 1525)
  • probable – Paul Peuerl, organist, organ builder and composer (born 1570)[9]

References

  1. Buelow, George J. (2004). A History of Baroque Music. Indiana University Press. p. 325. ISBN 9780253343659.
  2. Giovanni Gabrieli: Transmission and Reception of a Venetian Musical Tradition. Brepols. 2016. p. 18. ISBN 9782503570273.
  3. Cusick, Suzanne G., "Francesca Caccini", Grove Music Online, ed. L. Macy (Retrieved 20 May 2006), grovemusic.com Archived 2008-05-16 at the Wayback Machine (subscription access). (Grove Opera article)
  4. Britain), Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge (Great (1842). The Biographical Dictionary of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge--. Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans. p. 517.
  5. "Ruggiero Giovannelli - Oxford Reference". www.oxfordreference.com. Retrieved 7 May 2019.
  6. "Orlando Gibbons | English composer". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 7 May 2019.
  7. Lenaerts, R. B.; Forney, Kristine. L. Macy (ed.). Cornelis Verdonck. Grove Music Online. Retrieved 29 October 2010. (subscription required)
  8. Theodore Baker (1919). "Adam Gumpeltzhaimer". Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians.
  9. "Paul Peuerl". Library of Congress. Retrieved 7 May 2019.
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