1630 in music
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Events
- Giacomo Carissimi becomes the chapelmaster at the Church of San Apollinare in the German-Hungarian College in Rome.
- Ján Šimbracký buys a house in Spišské Podhradie.
Publications
- Paolo Agostini – Posthumous book of masses (Rome: Giovanni Battista Robletti)
- Adriano Banchieri – Trattenimenti da villa concertati in ordine seguente nel chitarrone con 5 voci in variati modi (Venice: Alessandro Vincenti), a collection of canzonettas for five voices and a theorbo
- Ignazio Donati – Le Fanfalughe for two, three, four, and five voices (Venice: Alessandro Vincenti), a book of madrigals
- Melchior Franck
- Der 85. Psalm des Königlichen Propheten Davids (Herr, der du bist vormals gnädig gewest) for eight voices (Coburg: Johann Forckel), a motet written for the jubilee held June 25–27, 1630
- Neues Christliches Weyhnacht Gesang for eight voices (Coburg: Johann Forckel), a Christmas motet
- Gottfried von Bulljon oder das erlösete Jerusalem (Coburg: Johann Forckel), incidental music for an oratorio performed in Coburg on June 14, 1630
- Marco da Gagliano – Responsoria maioris hebdomadae for four voices (Venice: Bartolomeo Magni)
- Giovanni Girolamo Kapsberger
- I pastori di Bettelemme nella nascita di N. Signor Giesu Christo (Rome: Paolo Masotti)
- Modulatus sacri diminutis voculis concinnati, vol. 2 (Rome: Paolo Masotti)
- Carlo Milanuzzi – Seventh book of ariose vaghezze for solo voice and guitar, Op. 17 (Venice: Alessandro Vincenti)
- Martin Peerson – Mottects or grave chamber musique, containing songs of five parts of several sorts (London: William Stansby)
Opera
- Claudio Monteverdi – Proserpina rapita
Births
- date unknown – Antonio Sartorio, composer (died 1680)
- probable
- Thomas Baltzar, violinist and composer (died 1663)
- Hafız Post, Turkish composer (died 1694)
- Susanna van Lee, Dutch actress and dancer (died 1700)
Deaths
- February 12 or 13 – Camillo Cortellini, composer, singer, and violinist (born 1561)[1]
- February 26 – William Brade, English composer, violinist and viol player (born 1560)
- June (or later) – Alessandro Grandi, Italian composer (born 1590)
- June 11 – Giovanni Francesco Anerio, Italian composer of oratorios (born c.1567)[2]
- June 29 – John Mundy, English organist and composer (born c. 1550)
- September 7 – Giovanni Battista Fontana, composer (born 1589)
- November 19 – Johann Hermann Schein, German composer (born 1586)
- date unknown – Thomas Bateson, writer of madrigals (born 1570)
- probable – Salamone Rossi, Venetian composer (born 1570)[3]
References
- Anne Schnoebelen. "Cortellini, Camillo." Grove Music Online. Oxford Music Online. Oxford University Press.
- Oscar Thompson; Nicolas Slonimsky (1956). The International Cyclopedia of Music and Musicians. Dodd, Mead. p. 2381.
- Darryl Lyman (1986). Great Jews in Music. J. David Publishers. p. 287. ISBN 978-0-8246-0315-1.
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