- Source: 1510s in music
The decade of the 1510s in music (years 1510–1519) involved some significant events.
Events
1513: Jacques Champion replaces Noel Bauldeweyn as magister cantorum at St Rombouts, Mechelen.
1517:
March – Heinrich Finck sends greetings from Mühldorf, Bavaria, to the humanist Joachim Vadian.
April 15 – Juan García de Basurto is hired as a singer by the cathedral chapter of Tarazona, at an annual salary of 1200 sueldos.
June – Silvestro Ganassi dal Fontego joins the pifferi of the Venetian government as a "contralto".
Sixt Dietrich is forced to leave Freiburg because of debts, but in November is appointed informator choralium by the cathedral chapter in Konstanz.
1518: Composer Ludwig Senfl loses a toe in a hunting accident.
Publications
1511:
Franciscus Bossinensis – Tenori e contrabassi intabulati col sopran in canto figurato per cantar e sonar col lauto, Libro secundo (Venice: Ottaviano Petrucci)
Arnolt Schlick – Spiegel der Orgelmacher und Organisten, the first treatise on organ-making in German
Sebastian Virdung – Musica getutscht und angezogen, published in Basel, the first European treatise entirely devoted to the subject of musical instruments.
1512: Arnolt Schlick – Tabulaturen etlicher lobgesang, a collection of organ and lute pieces
1515: Antoine de Févin – Masses (Fossombrone: Ottaviano Petrucci), also includes one mass by Pierre de la Rue (Quarti toni)
1517:
Andreas Ornithoparchus – Musicae activae micrologus (Leipzig).
Sebastian z Felsztyna – Opusculum musicae compilatum (Kraków: Johann Haller).
1518:
The Medici Codex (manuscript)
Franchinus Gaffurius – De harmonia musicorum instrumentorum opus. Milan.
Compositions
1510: Josquin des Prez assembles or composes Missa de Beata Virgine, a musical setting of the Ordinary of the Mass, and it becomes the most popular of his masses in the 16th century.
1513: Heinrich Isaac – Optime pastor, motet celebrating the meeting in December of Maximilian I's Chancellor, Cardinal Lang, and the newly elected Pope Leo X
1514: Costanzo Festa – Quis dabit oculis, funeral ode for Anne of Brittany, Queen of France
1519: Adrian Willaert – Quid non ebrietas designat, setting of Horace's fifth epistle, for four voices
Births
= 1510
=Juan Bermudo, Spanish music theorist (died 1565)
Antonio de Cabezón, Spanish composer and organist of the Renaissance (died 1566)
probable – Loys Bourgeois, French composer, famous for his Protestant hymn tunes (died c.1561)
probable – Gian Domenico del Giovane da Nola, Neapolitan composer, famous for his villanescas and villanellas in the Neapolitan style (died 1592)
= 1511
=date unknown – Nicola Vicentino, Italian music theorist and composer (died 1575/1576)
= 1513
=February 14 – Domenico Ferrabosco, Italian composer and singer (died 1574)
May 16 – Antonfrancesco Doni, Italian writer, academic and musician (died 1574)
= 1516
=probable – Cipriano de Rore, Flemish composer (died 1565)
= 1517
=January 17 – Antonio Scandello, Italian composer and instrumentalist (died 1580)
January 31 or March 22 – Gioseffo Zarlino, Venetian theorist (died 1590)
Deaths
1513: January – Hans Folz, German Meistersinger, barber, and surgeon (born ?before 1440)
1517: March 26 – Heinrich Isaac, Franco-Flemish composer (born c.1445)
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- 1510s in music
- 1510s
- Timeline of musical events
- 2024 in music
- 1510s in architecture
- 2025 in music
- 2024 in American music
- 1960s in music
- Popular music
- List of music genres and styles