The Renaissance 1430-1600

  • Period: 1397 to 1474

    Guillaume Dufay

    The first important renaissance composer, used medieval cadences
  • Period: 1410 to 1497

    Johannes Ockeghem

    Bass singer
  • Period: 1430 to

    Renaissance

    Dominated by parallel thirds and sixths, secular music became equal to church music, a cappella polyphony, word-painting,
  • Period: 1430 to

    Melody

    Flowing and melismatic
  • Period: 1430 to

    Rhythm

    A lot of triple and double groupings
  • Period: 1430 to

    Harmony

    Progressions centered around 3rds and 6ths as well as church modes
  • Period: 1430 to

    Texture

    Four-part polyphonic works, homorhythm and counterpoint
  • Period: 1430 to

    Instruments

    Shawms, cornets, slide trumpets, sackbuts, harps, l vielles, lutes, psalteries, portrative
  • Jan 1, 1445

    Invention of the Printing Press

    Invented by Johannes Gutenberg
  • Period: 1450 to 1517

    Heinrich Isaac

    Italian who influenced German music
  • Period: 1450 to 1521

    Josquin des Prez

    Considered, by Martin Luther, the best composer of our time
  • Period: 1452 to 1518

    Pierre de la Rue

    Leading composer at Burgundian court
  • Period: 1457 to 1505

    Jacob Obrecht

    Made contributions to large scale forms and their unity
  • 1477

    Johannes Tinctoris Liver de arte contrapuncti

    Anounces the rebirth in art of music
  • Period: 1483 to 1546

    Martin Luther

    German theologian Founder of the Lutheran church
  • Period: 1490 to 1562

    Adrian Willaert

    Teacher who used complex, continuous polyphony
  • Period: 1505 to

    Thomas Tallis

    Taught Byrd, wrote both for the Latin and reformed English Liturgies
  • Period: 1507 to 1568

    Jacques Areadelt

    Famous for early madrigals
  • Period: 1515 to 1565

    Cipriano de Rore

    associated with Willaert
  • Period: 1521 to

    Philipp de Monte

    Prolific composer of renaissance that mixed polyphony and homophony
  • Period: 1525 to

    Giovanni P. da Palestrina

    Icon of Renaissance era and made contrapuntal liturgical music
  • Period: 1532 to

    Orlando di Lasso

    Over 2000 compositions in all languages
  • Period: 1532 to

    Andrea Gabrieli

    Pupil of Willaert, uncle to Giovanni
  • Period: 1534 to

    Count Giovanni Bardi

    Leader of the Florentine Camerata
  • Period: 1535 to

    Giaches de Wert

    Pupil of de Rope; wrote madrigals for the Concerto della Donne
  • Period: 1540 to

    William Byrd

    Catholic composer writing both Protestant and Catholic music in England
  • Period: 1548 to

    Tomas Luis de Victoria

    sacred spanish music composer
  • Period: 1553 to

    Luca Marenzio

    Leading Madrigal composer of late 16th century
  • Period: 1557 to

    Thomas Morley

    Contributed to the development of the English madrigal
  • Period: 1561 to

    Carlo Gesualdo

    Known for his chromaticism, Neapolitan prince of venous, murdered wife
  • Period: 1567 to

    Claudio Monteverdi

    Took music in a different style
  • Period: 1576 to

    Thomas Weelkes

    English organist