Costanzo Festa: Difference between revisions

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*''Madrigale de M. Constantio Festa Libro Primo'' (Venice?, 1538)
*''Madrigale de M. Constantio Festa Libro Primo'' (Venice?, 1538)
*''Il primo libro de madrigali a tre voci'' (Venice, 1541) – contains only one work by Festa
*''Il primo libro de madrigali a tre voci'' (Venice, 1541) – contains only one work by Festa
*''Il vero libro de madrigali a tre voci'' (Venice, 1543)
*[http://www.arsubtilior.com/2013/01/festa-florentia-tempus-est.html '''''Florentia tempus est (from I-TVd 36''''')]
*[http://www.arsubtilior.com/2013/01/festa-florentia-tempus-est.html '''''Florentia tempus est (from I-TVd 36''''')]
==External links==
==External links==

Revision as of 05:47, 6 September 2021

Disambig colour.svg "Festa" redirects here. You may be looking for Sebastian Festa. See also the disambiguation page for Festa.

Life

Born: c.1490

Died: 10 April 1545

Biography Costanzo Festa was among the pioneering Italian composers of the ‘new’ polyphonic style of the High Renaissance, and also one of the early madrigalists. From 1517, he served in the Papal Choir in Rome, at which time he was one of very few Italians in a choir dominated by Northern European singers. He remained associated with the Sistine Chapel choir until his death in 1545. His sacred output includes four masses and more than forty motets.

View the Wikipedia article on Costanzo Festa.

List of choral works

Secular music

Sacred music

Other works not listed above (See Template:CheckMissing for possible reasons and solutions)


Click here to search for this composer on CPDL

Publications

  • Madrigale de M. Constantio Festa Libro Primo (Venice?, 1538)
  • Il primo libro de madrigali a tre voci (Venice, 1541) – contains only one work by Festa
  • Il vero libro de madrigali a tre voci (Venice, 1543)
  • Florentia tempus est (from I-TVd 36)

External links