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Español: Gregorio Allegri (1582 -1652) - Miserere Mei, Deus (Dios, apiádate de mí), extractos del Salmo 51. Grabación realizada por el Ensamble Escénico Vocal del Sistema Nacional de Fomento Musical en la Catedral de Tlaxcala (Conjunto Conventual Franciscano y Catedralicio de Nuestra Señora de la Asunción), Patrimonio de la Humanidad de la Unesco, Noviembre de 2021
The Miserere is one of the most frequently recorded pieces of late Renaissance music.An early and celebrated [7] recording of it is the one from March 1963 by the Choir of King's College, Cambridge, conducted by David Willcocks, which was sung in English, [8] and featured the then-treble Roy Goodman.
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Gregorio Allegri. Gregorio Allegri (c. 14 January 1582 – 17 February 1652) [1] [2] was an Italian Catholic priest and composer of the Roman School and brother of Domenico Allegri; he was also a singer. He was born [3] and died in Rome. He is chiefly known for his Miserere for two choirs.
Atkins based his English edition of Allegri's Miserere, with the famous "top C" in the second-half of the 4-voice falsobordone, on an earlier edition published by William Smyth Rockstro in 1880. But it was the Atkins edition in 1951, and a subsequent recording by the Choir of King's College Cambridge , that led to it becoming one of the most ...
The Story of Allegri's Miserere: A 30-minute episode, detailing the history and performance of the Miserere, and including a full performance. [4] 21 Dec 2008 Sacred Music at Christmas A Christmas History Simon Russell Beale explores the history of Christmas music on location in Europe. [5] 24 Dec 2010 A Choral Christmas
Tommaso Bai, or Tommaso Baj, was born in Crevalcore around 1650 and died in Rome on 22 December 1714. [1] He was an Italian conductor, composer, and tenor at the Vatican. He is most well known for his Miserere, [2] [3] which is associated with Gregorio Allegri's Miserere. [4]
It was Holy Week, and that evening they attended a performance of Allegri's Miserere in the Sistine Chapel. Allegri, who had been a singer in the Sistine Chapel Choir, had composed the piece in 1638. A complex nine-part choral work, the Allegri Miserere was considered one of the choir's most famous pieces and was performed during the Tenebrae ...