"Praetorius devoted most of his life to church music: he published more than twenty collections, mostly of settings of Lutheran chorales, and a number of others are known to have existed in manuscript. He also planned a series of collections of secular music named after the various Greek muses, including Euterpe (Italian and English dances), Thalia (toccatas and canzonas) and Erato (German secular songs). Unfortunately, in the event he managed to publish only one, Terpsichore, musarum aoniarum quinta (1612), consisting of 312 dances in four, five and six parts. The contents of Terpsichore are often assumed to be the compositions of Praetorius himself, however they are collections of different French dance stylessome by him and others are such as harmonisations of melodies supplied by Emeraud; original five-part pieces by Caroubel, a French court violinist; and those he labelled 'anonymous' (pieces received by him in two-part form, to which he just added inner parts)."
Nederlands
Titel | Dances from Terpsichore 1612 (The Parley of Instruments) |
Auteur | Michael Praetorius |
Type materiaal | CD |
Uitgave | Hyperion, 2001 |
Overige gegevens | 1 disc |
Taal | Nederlands |
Onderwerp algemeen | Renaissance ; ORKEST: barokorkest |