Felice Anerio: Difference between revisions
Adrianwall (talk | contribs) mNo edit summary |
(New work entry: Adoramus te, Christe) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Recent_additions}} | |||
*{{NoCo|Adoramus te, Christe}} | |||
{{redirect|Anerio|Giovanni Francesco Anerio}} | {{redirect|Anerio|Giovanni Francesco Anerio}} | ||
<!-- '''Aliases:''' --> | <!-- '''Aliases:''' --> |
Revision as of 12:57, 24 June 2017
The next work entry has been recently added automatically. Users are invited to check it and, if necessary, correct and move it to the appropriate position in the page. If the work list on this composer page is automated already (see Automating the work list on composer pages) the work entry should be already automatically shown at the appropriate position, so you can just delete the next line. You can also consider to automate the work list on this composer page if not automated already. Remove also the line(s) written {{Recent additions}} when done.
Life
Born: 1560
Died: 27 September 1614
Biography:
Felice Anerio was an Italian composer of the late Renaissance and early Baroque eras, and a member of the Roman School of composers. He was the older brother of another important, and somewhat more progressive, composer of the same period, Giovanni Francesco Anerio.
- The above is an excerpt from Wikipedia. For the full article, click here.
List of choral works
Sacred music
Secular music
Uncertain attributions
Click here to search for this composer on CPDL
Publications
- Madrigali spirituali … libro primo, 5vv (Rome, 1585)
- Madrigali spirituali … secondo libro, 5vv (Rome, 1585)
- Sacri hymni, et cantica … liber primus, 8vv (Venice, 1596)
- Sacri hymni et cantica … liber secundus, 5, 6, 8vv (Rome, 1602)
- Responsoria ad lectiones divini officii feriae quartae, quintae, et sextae sanctae hebdomadae, 4vv (Rome, 1606)
- Canzonette … libro primo, 4vv (Venice, 1586)
- Il primo libro de madrigali, 5, 8vv (Venice, 1587)
- Primo libro de madrigali, 6vv (Venice, 1590)
- Madrigali, 3vv (Venice, 1598)
- Madrigali, libro secondo, 6vv (Rome, 1602)
Together with Francesco Soriano, Anerio also edited the so-called 'Medician Gradual'
External links
Works by Felice Anerio in the Petrucci Music Library (IMSLP)