N
http://www.openclassical.com
https://www.openclassical.com
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
N
N
N
Home
Composers
Timeline
Playlists
L
Calm
Drama
Excitement
Romance
Study
Create - coming soon!
Mirabilia Testimonia
Josquin des Prez
Born
c. 1455
Died
August 27, 1521
Timeline
Renaissance
Nationality
France
Top Ten
All Works
Timeline
Wikipedia
More Composers
renaissance
Renaissance
Prev
Next
Binchois
, Gilles
Bingen
, Hildegard of
Dufay
, Guillaume
Dunstaple
, John
Léonin
Machaut
, Guillaume
Pérotin
Vitry
, Philippe de
Agricola
, Alexander
Arcadelt
, Jacques
Bull
, John
Busnois
, Antoine
Byrd
, William
Caccini
, Giulio
Dowland
, John
Gesualdo
, Carlo
Janequin
, Clément
Lassus
, Orlande de
Ockeghem
, Johannes
Palestrina
, Giovanni
Praetorius
, Michael
Prez
, Josquin des
Sweelinck
, Jan
Tallis
, Thomas
Victoria
, Tomás L. de
Allegri
, Gregorio
Bach
, J. S.
Frescobaldi
, G.
Fux
, Johann
Gibbons
, Orlando
Handel
, G. F.
Lully
, Jean-Baptiste
Monteverdi
, Claudio
Pachelbel
, Johann
Pergolesi
, G. B.
Purcell
, Henry
Rameau
, J. P.
Scarlatti
, Alessandro
Scarlatti
, Domenico
Telemann
, G. P.
Vivaldi
, Antonio
Beethoven
, L. van
Bellini
, Vincenzo
Cherubini
, Luigi
Clementi
, Muzio
Gluck
, Christoph
Haydn
, Joseph
Mozart
, W. A.
Weber
, Carl Maria von
Alkan
, C. V.
Berlioz
, Hector
Bizet
, Georges
Borodin
, Alexander
Brahms
, Johannes
Bruch
, Max
Bruckner
, Anton
Chopin
, Frédéric
Debussy
, Claude
Delibes
, Léo
Delius
, Frederick
Dvořák
, Antonín
Elgar
, Edward
Fauré
, Gabriel
Franck
, César
Glinka
, Mikhail
Granados
, Enrique
Grieg
, Edvard
Indy
, Vincent d'
Janáček
, Leoš
Lalo
, Édouard
Liszt
, Franz
Mahler
, Gustav
Mendelssohn
, Felix
Meyerbeer
, Giacomo
Mussorgsky
, Modest
Nielsen
, Carl
Puccini
, Giacomo
Reger
, Max
Rimsky-Korsakov
, Nikolai
Rossini
, Gioachino
Saint-Saëns
, Camille
Sarasate
, Pablo de
Satie
, Éric
Schubert
, Franz
Schumann
, Robert
Scriabin
, Alexander
Smetana
, Bedřich
Tchaikovsky
, P. I.
Verdi
, Giuseppe
Vieuxtemps
, Henri
Wagner
, Richard
Wolf
, Hugo
Ysaÿe
, Eugène
Adams
, John
Barber
, Samuel
Bartók
, Béla
Berg
, Alban
Britten
, Benjamin
Carter
, Elliott
Copland
, Aaron
Dutilleux
, Henri
Ginastera
, Alberto
Glass
, Philip
Górecki
, Henryk
Holst
, Gustav
Ives
, Charles
Ligeti
, György
Medtner
, Nikolai
Messiaen
, Olivier
Prokofiev
, Sergei
Rachmaninoff
, S.
Ravel
, Maurice
Respighi
, Ottorino
Schnittke
, Alfred
Schoenberg
, Arnold
Shostakovich
, Dmitri
Sibelius
, Jean
Strauss
, Richard
Stravinsky
, Igor
Szymanowski
, Karol
Tippett
, Michael
Villa-Lobos
, Heitor
Webern
, Anton
Amazon Offers
Josquin: Stabat mater, Motets
New:
$6.96
Used:
$6.92
Josquin: Motets & Chansons
New:
$7.83
Used:
$6.64
Essential Josquin Des Prez
New:
$10.23
Used:
$9.78
Josquin: Masses - De beata virgine, Ave maris stella
New:
$13.66
Used:
$13.00
Josquin des Prés: Missa Pange Lingua; Missa La Sol Fa Re Mi
New:
$13.70
Used:
$6.90
Tallis Scholars Sing Josquin
New:
$13.91
Used:
$11.75
Josquin des Préz: Missa Pange Lingua
New:
$15.28
Used:
$5.99
Renaissance: The Music of Josquin Desprez
New:
$16.97
Used:
$3.55
Les Fantaisies De Josquin des Prez
New:
$18.73
Used:
$17.18
Work Details
Similar Works
Composed
unknown
Age
unknown
Genre
Vocal
Sub-Genre
Motet
Sub-Sub-Genre
Catalogs
Music Scores
IMSLP
Sheet Music Plus
Chanson la Belle se siet
El Grillo
La Deploration sur le Mort de Jean Ockeghem
Miserere mei Deus
Praeter rerum seriem
Qui Habitat
Veni Sancte Spiritus
YouTube Player
Josquin Des Prez: Mirabilia testimonia
Movie Description from YouTube
Perhaps a native of the Vermandois region of Picardy, he was a singer at Milan Cathedral in 1459, remaining there until December 1472. By July 1474 he was one of the 'cantori di capella' in the chapel of Galeazzo Maria Sforza. Between 1476 and 1504 he passed into the service of Cardinal Ascanio Sforza, whom he probably accompanied in Rome in 1484. His name first appears among the papal chapel choir in 1486 and recurs sporadically; he had left the choir by 1501. In this Italian period Josquin reached artistic maturity. He then went to France (he may also have done so while at the papal chapel) and probably served Louis XII's court. Although he may have had connections with the Ferrara court (through the Sforzas) in the 1480s and 1490s, no formal relationship with the court is known before 1503 when, for a year, he was maestro di cappella there and the highest-paid singer in the chapel's history. There he probably wrote primarily masses and motets. An outbreak of plague in 1503 forced the court to leave Ferrara (Josquin's place was taken by Obrecht, who fell victim in 1505). He was in the north again, at Notre Dame at Condé, in 1504; he may have been connected with Margaret of Austria's court, 1508-11. He died in 1521. Several portraits survive, one attributed to Leonardo da Vinci. Josquin's works gradually became known throughout western Europe and were regarded as models by many composers and theorists. Petrucci's three books of his masses (1502-14) reflect contemporary esteem, as does Attaingnant's collection of his chansons (1550). Several laments were written on his death (including Gombert's elegy Musae Jovis), and as late as 1554 Jacquet of Mantua paid him tribute in a motet. He was praised by 16th-century literary figures (including Castiglione and Rabelais) and was Martin Luther's favourite composer. Josquin was the greatest composer of the high Renaissance, the most varied in invention and the most profound in expression. Much of his music cannot be dated. Generally, however, his first period (up to circa 1485) is characterized by abstract, melismatic counterpoint in the manner of Ockeghem and by tenuous relationships between words and music. The middle period (to circa 1505) saw the development and perfection of the technique of pervasive imitation based on word-generated motifs. This style has been seen as a synthesis of two traditions: the northem polyphony of Dufay, Busnois and Ockeghem, in which he presumably had his earliest training, and the more chordal, harmonically orientated practice of Italy. In the final period the relationship between word and note becomes even closer and there is increasing emphasis on declamation and rhetorical expression within a style of the utmost economy. His many motets span all three periods. One of the earliest, the four-part Victimae paschali laudes (1502), exemplifies his early style, with its dense texture, lack of imitation, patches of stagnant rhythm and rudimentary treatment of dissonance. Greater maturity is shown in Planxit autem David, in which homophonic and freely imitative passages alternate, and in Absalon, fili mi, with its flexible combination of textures. His later motets, such as In principio erat verbum, combine motivic intensity and melodic succinctness with formal clarity; they are either freely composed, four-part settings of biblical texts, or large-scale cantus firmus pieces. Transparent textures and duet writing are common. Josquin's 18 complete masses combine elements of cantus firmus, parody and paraphrase techniques. One of the earliest, L'ami Baudichon, is a cantus firmus mass on a simple dance formula; the simplicity of melody and rhythm and the clarity of harmony and texture recall the Burgundian style of the 1450s and 1460s. Fortuna desperata, on the other hand, is an early example of parody. Canonic writing and ostinato hgures are features. His last great masses, notably the Missa de beata virgine and the Missa 'Pange lingua' were precede...
YouTube Results
Page 1 of 1
« Prev
Next »
09:48
Josquin Des Prez: Mirabilia testimonia
14
Josquin_des_Prez
Prez, Josquin des
4303
4303
mirabilia_testimonia
Mirabilia Testimonia
1
1
pBwfZQ_bfXw
N