- also be
called polychoral. Specifically, this term is
usually applied to
music of the late
Renaissance and
early Baroque periods.
Polychoral techniques are...
- of an orchestra, or
different "choirs" of
voices or
instruments in a
polychoral composition. In
typical 18th
century to 21st
century oratorios and m****es...
- The
Venetian polychoral style was a type of
music of the late
Renaissance and
early Baroque eras
which involved spatially separate choirs singing in alternation...
-
composer and
organist of the late
Renaissance and
early Baroque whose polychoral motets in 8 to 20
voices are
intricate and
vividly expressive. Some of...
-
composition (the
Venetian school) and the
development of the
Venetian polychoral style under composers such as
Adrian Willaert, who
worked at St Mark's...
-
divided into two
groups of
three that sing
antiphonally in the
Venetian polychoral style. The
motet is
often performed for Christmas, in services, concerts...
- anti****te the
style of Palestrina, and in
addition he was an
early pioneer of
polychoral writing. He may have been
French in origin,
since Girolamo Cardano, writing...
-
Giovanni Gabrieli, one of the
renowned practitioners of the
Venetian polychoral style:
Gabrieli also
contributed many
instrumental canzonas, composed...
-
again became a
center of
musical innovation, with the
development of the
polychoral style of the
Venetian School,
which spread northward into
Germany around...
-
Church in Buffalo, US". B****ani Grampp,
Florian (August 2008). "On a
Roman Polychoral Performance in
August 1665".
Early Music. 36 (3): 415–433. doi:10.1093/em/can095...