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From 2007 to 2015, the IMSLP / Petrucci Music Library used a logo based on a score. The score image in the background was taken from the beginning of the first printed book of music, the Harmonice Musices Odhecaton. It was published in Venice, Italy in 1501 by Ottaviano Petrucci, the library's namesake. [5] [non-primary source needed]
George William Henry Faulkes (1863–1933) – known professionally as William Faulkes [1] – was an English musician now best known as the composer of organ music. [ 2 ] Early life
Ottaviano Petrucci (Fossombrone, 18 June 1466 – Venice, 7 May 1539) was an Italian printer. His Harmonice Musices Odhecaton , a collection of chansons printed in 1501, is commonly misidentified as the first book of sheet music printed from movable type .
Frontispiece to the Odhecaton. Adieu mes amours by Josquin des Prez in the Odhecaton.. The Harmonice Musices Odhecaton (One Hundred Songs of Harmonic Music, [1] also known simply as the Odhecaton) is an anthology of polyphonic secular songs published by Ottaviano Petrucci in 1501 in Venice.
May 7 – Thomas Linley the younger, English composer (died 1778) June 20 – Joseph Martin Kraus, German-born composer (died 1792) September 8 – Anton Teyber, composer and organist (died 1822) September 27 – Christoffer Christian Karsten, Swedish operatic tenor (died 1827) December 30 – Paul Wranitzky, Moravian-Austrian composer (died 1808)
March 20 – Biagio Marini, violinist and composer (born 1594) July 2 – Thomas Selle, composer (born 1599) July 24 – Thomas Baltzar, violinist (born c.1631) December 5 – Severo Bonini, composer (born 1582) date unknown. Antoine de Beaulieu, ballet dancer; Nicolas Hotman, composer (born c.1610) Heinrich Scheidemann, organist and composer ...
ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — A library book that is more than a century overdue was finally returned in St. Paul, Minnesota. Titled “Famous Composers” and featuring the likes of Bach and Mozart ...
He returned to Tambov in 1942 where he taught at the College of Music and was Chairman of the Composers' Union. For his short career, Zhelobinsky's output was large. His four operas, which include The Peasant of Komarino (Комаринский мужик), produced in Leningrad in 1933, and Mother (Мать, 1939, based on the novel by Maxim ...