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Claudio Merulo (Italian pronunciation: [ˈklaudjo
ˈmɛːrulo]; 8
April 1533 – 4 May 1604) was an
Italian composer,
publisher and
organist of the late Renaissance...
- composers,
including Ascanio Mayone,
Giovanni Maria Trabaci, and
Claudio Merulo.
Girolamo Frescobaldi was
appointed organist of St. Peter's Basilica, a...
- Franco-Flemish polyphony, and
included Cipriano de Rore, Zarlino, and
Claudio Merulo;
members of the
progressive group included Donato,
Giovanni Croce, and later...
-
Claudio Merulo,
Gioseffo Zarlino and
Costanzo Porta (who was also a
friar minor conventual), and he
probably studied with each of them.
Merulo mentioned...
- Mark's at this time also
began to
employ a
second organist (it was
Claudio Merulo for the last
eight years of Padovano's tenure),
which allowed two simultaneous...
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publications of the 1590s
include toccatas, by
composers such as
Claudio Merulo,
Andrea and
Giovanni Gabrieli,
Adriano Banchieri, and
Luzzasco Luzzaschi...
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birthplace of
composer Bonifazio Asioli,
Venetian School composer Claudio Merulo, rock
singer Luciano Ligabue,
educator Loris Malaguzzi, who
developed the...
- Tilton, Mary C. 1989. "The
Influence of
Psalm Tone and Mode on the
Structure of the
Phrygian Toccatas of
Claudio Merulo".
Theoria 4:106–122. ISSN 0040-5817...
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figuration that
influenced subsequent composers. The
Italian composer Claudio Merulo wrote in the
typical Italian genres of the toccata, the canzona, and the...
- –
Pierre Viret,
Swiss theologian and
reformer (b. 1511) 1604 –
Claudio Merulo,
Italian organist and
composer (b. 1533) 1605 –
Ulisse Aldrovandi, Italian...