When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of Renaissance composers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Renaissance_composers

    Giovanni Mazzuoli. 1360 – 1426. Italian. Also known as Jovannes de Florentia, Giovanni degli Organi and Giovanni di Niccol. Pycard. fl. c. 1390-after c. 1410. English. Has works preserved in the first layer of the Old Hall Manuscript and elsewhere. His identity is unclear; probably English, but possibly from France.

  3. List of medieval composers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_medieval_composers

    Part of this divergence was from the death of Machaut, where—after a brief continuance of the Ars nova style through the post-Machaut generation of F. Andrieu, Grimace, Jehan Vaillant and P. des Molins —there was a new rhythmically-complex style now known as ars subtilior. The major figures of ars subtilior included both composers from ...

  4. Renaissance (song) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renaissance_(song)

    Renaissance (song) " Renaissance " is a song by British electronic group M People, released on 28 February 1994 as the fourth and final single from their second album, Elegant Slumming (1994). In Australia, it was released as the third single from the album. It was written by Mike Pickering and Paul Heard and produced by M People.

  5. Recorder (musical instrument) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recorder_(musical_instrument)

    Recorder players. The recorder is a family of woodwind musical instruments in the group known as internal duct flutes: flutes with a whistle mouthpiece, also known as fipple flutes, although this is an archaic term. A recorder can be distinguished from other duct flutes by the presence of a thumb-hole for the upper hand and seven finger-holes ...

  6. Renaissance music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renaissance_music

    One of the most pronounced features of early Renaissance European art music was the increasing reliance on the interval of the third and its inversion, the sixth (in the Middle Ages, thirds and sixths had been considered dissonances, and only perfect intervals were treated as consonances: the perfect fourth the perfect fifth, the octave, and the unison).

  7. Innsbruck, ich muss dich lassen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Innsbruck,_ich_muss_dich...

    Composed. 1485. (1485) " Innsbruck, ich muss dich lassen " ("Innsbruck, I must leave thee") is a German Renaissance song. It was first published as a choral movement by the Franco-Flemish composer Heinrich Isaac (ca. 1450–1517); the melody was probably written by him. The lyricist is unknown; an authorship of Emperor Maximilian I, as was ...

  8. Category:Renaissance chansons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Renaissance_chansons

    Renaissance Chansons is mainly for those European songs which were extensively developed by many composers or were used (e.g. as cantus firmus) for mass settings, in the period 1400-1600. Pages in category "Renaissance chansons"

  9. Ode to Joy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ode_to_Joy

    Ode to Joy. " Ode to Joy " (German: "An die Freude" [an diː ˈfʁɔʏdə]) is an ode written in the summer of 1785 by German poet, playwright, and historian Friedrich Schiller. It was published the following year in the German magazine Thalia. In 1808, a slightly revised version changed two lines of the first stanza and omitted last stanza.