Dum transisset sabbatum (Jacques Alart): Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(→Music files: Exported PDF file as MXL one, uploaded and added link) |
|||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
==Music files== | ==Music files== | ||
{{#Legend:}} | {{#Legend:}} | ||
* {{PostedDate|2022-10-25}} {{CPDLno|71272}} [[Media:Alard_Dum_T.pdf|{{pdf}}]] | * {{PostedDate|2022-10-25}} {{CPDLno|71272}} [[Media:Alard_Dum_T.pdf|{{pdf}}]] [[Media:Alard_Dum_T.mxl|{{XML}}]] | ||
{{Editor|Mick Swithinbank|2022-10-25}}{{ScoreInfo|A4|10|104}}{{Copy|CPDL}} | {{Editor|Mick Swithinbank|2022-10-25}}{{ScoreInfo|A4|10|104}}{{Copy|CPDL}} | ||
:{{EdNotes|Transposed down a tone.}} | :{{EdNotes|Transposed down a tone.}} |
Revision as of 11:41, 21 November 2022
Music files
ICON | SOURCE |
---|---|
MusicXML | |
File details | |
Help |
- Editor: Mick Swithinbank (submitted 2022-10-25). Score information: A4, 10 pages, 104 kB Copyright: CPDL
- Edition notes: Transposed down a tone.
General Information
Title: Dum transisset sabbatum
Composer: Jacques Alart
Lyricist:
Number of voices: 4vv Voicing: ATTB
Genre: Sacred, Motet
Language: Latin
Instruments: A cappella
First published: 1539 in Primus liber cum quatuor vocibus. Mottetti del frutto a quatro (Gardano), no. 6
2nd published: 1554 in Evangelia dominicorum et festorum dierum tomus primus (Berg & Neuber), no. 27
Description: Source: Liber cum 4 voc.: Motetti del Frutto a4
pub. Gardane, Venice, 1539. Although the composer (Alard or Alart, possibly called Simon - see Polyphony database) has disappeared almost without trace, this work is preserved in four 16th-century printed sources produced by three different publishers in Venice and Nuremberg.