Jakob Petelin Gallus (Handl)


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Upcoming concerts →

– Tue 7 Oct: Simon Mulligan performs an all-Chopin recital on Chopin's Pleyel piano Hatchlands House, Surrey, UK
– Fri 10 Oct: Italian Music Curtiss Hall in the Fine Arts Building, 430 S. Michigan Avenue, Chicago, IL, USA
– Sun 12 Oct: Stern Showcase Recital Palace Theater 61 Atlantic Street, Stamford CT 06901
– Sun 12 Oct: Birthday Tribute to Luciano Pavarotti Ventura College Theater,Ventura, California, USA
– Wed 15 Oct: Iron Rain Finlandia Hall, Helsinki, Finland
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Today → (6 Oct)

Birthdays:
Karol Szymanowski
Udo Zimmermann
Inal Bilsel
Dying days:
Heinrich Albert
Francesco Onofrio Manfredini
Antonio Maria Gaspare Sacchini
Jean-François Le Sueur
Thomas Dyke Acland Tellefsen
Events:
– (1868) Jacques Offenbach: Premiere of La Périchole, in Paris, France.
– (1906) Andrey Schulz-Evler: Recording of the “Blue Danube Arabesque”, Welte-Mignon Piano Roll No.1305, with Josef Lhevinne at the piano.
– (1933) Karol Szymanowski: Premiere of violin concerto no. 2, in Warsaw, Poland.
– (1951) Pierre Boulez: Premiere of Polyphonie X, in Donaueschingen, Germany.
– (1977) Michael Tippett: Premiere of Symphony no. 4, in Chicago, USA.

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Thomas Alexandrovich de Hartmann (2 Oct)
Josef Antonín Gurecký (2 Oct)
Albert William Ketèlbey (2 Oct)
Franz von Holstein (2 Oct)
August Harder (2 Oct)
Henri Hardouin (2 Oct)
Henry Harington (2 Oct)
George Ivanovich Gurdjieff (2 Oct)
Václav Matyáš Gurecký (2 Oct)
Guillaume IX d’Aquitaine (1 Oct)

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Picture of Jakob Petelin Gallus|Handl.

Sheet music for Gallus



[details ←] Exultate Justi in Domino choral
[details ←] Sadness Viola,
[details ←] Duo Seraphim Piano, Vocal, choral
[details ←] Pater Noster
[details ←] Ascendit Deus God Goes Up On High A Cappella Latin And English choral
[details ←] Alleluia Trumpet, Organ, Trombone,
[details ←] Three ( 3) Festive Pieces Trombone,
[details ←] Lobet den Herren, alle Heiden/Gelobet seist du, Jesu Christ choral
[details ←] Alleluia! In Your Resurrection Vocal, choral
[details ←] In nomine Jesu Piano, Vocal, choral
[details ←] Tribus Miraculis Ornatum Diem choral
[details ←] Alleluia, in Resurrectione tua, Christe choral
[details ←] Haec Est Dies choral
[details ←] Ich Bin Die Auferstehung
[details ←] Lord In Thy Resurrection choral
[details ←] Ecce concipies
[details ←] Ecce, quomodo moritur iustus
[details ←] Halleluja! In deiner Auferstehung

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Born: 1550 — Reifnitz, Carniola (now Ribnica) — Slovenia
Died: 18 July 1591 — Prague — Bohemia (now Czech Republic)
→ See also: Slovenian composers | Renaissance composers |
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Music



His most notable work is the six part "Opus musicum", a collection of motets that would eventually cover the liturgical needs of the entire ecclesiastical year in 1577. The motet "O magnum mysterium" comes from the first volume (printed in 1586) which covers the period from the first Sunday of Advent to the Septuagesima. This motet for 8 voices gives evidence of Venetian influence in its use of the coro spezzato technique (= polychorality).

His wide-ranging, eclectic style blends archaism and modernity. He rarely used cantus firmus, preferring the then-new Venetian polychoral manner, yet he was equally conversant with earlier imitative techniques. Some of his chromatic transitions foreshadowed the breakup of modality; his five-voice motet "Mirabile mysterium" contains chromaticism worthy of Don Carlo Gesualdo. He enjoyed word painting in the style of the madrigal, yet he could write the simple "Ecce quomodo moritur justus" later used by G.F. Händel in his funeral anthem "The Ways of Zion Do Mourn".


Contribution by Jan Vavra <janvavratiscali.cz>.

In his collection of music published in Prague he uses Italian and Netherlands techniques with skilful use of counterpoint. Many of his polychoral pieces illustrate the influence of Willaert and Lassus.

Work:

Life

German-Austrian composer known for his sacred music. A Cistercian monk, Gallus travelled in Bohemia, Moravia, and Silesia, went to Melk Abbey/Lower Austria. He was a member of the Viennese court chapel in 1574, and was choirmaster to the bishop of Olmutz (modern Olomouc, Czech Republic) in 1579-85.


Contribution by Jan Vavra <janvavratiscali.cz>.

Handl lived in Austria from around 1565 and in 1574/5 he sang in the Vienna Hofkapelle under Monte. After extensive travelling, he became choirmaster to the Bishop of Olomouc from ca. 1579 to 1585, and Kantor of St Jan na Brzehu, Prague from ca. 1586 to 1591.

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Contributions by: eichner | janvavra |

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