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Orlando di Lasso

Orlando di Lasso. Franco-Flemish composer b. 1530; Mons, Belgium d. June 14, 1594; Munich, Germany. Travels. 1. Mons, Belgium 2. Mantua (Dr. Sander's homeboy!), Italy    3. Sicily, Italy 4. Milan, Italy 5. Naples, Italy 6. Rome, Italy

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Orlando di Lasso

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  1. Orlando di Lasso Franco-Flemish composer b. 1530; Mons, Belgium d. June 14, 1594; Munich, Germany

  2. Travels • 1. Mons, Belgium • 2. Mantua (Dr. Sander's homeboy!), Italy    • 3. Sicily, Italy • 4. Milan, Italy • 5. Naples, Italy • 6. Rome, Italy • 7. Munich, Germany (his home and final resting place)

  3. BIO He composed: motets, madrigals, chansons, and lieder; Masses, Magnificats, and Lamentations.  Just some interesting information about Lasso.  By the age of 12, Lasso known for his amazing singing voice had already been kidnapped three times. Also, by the age of 12, Lasso had moved to Sicily where he started working in the musical establishment of the viceroy.  He stayed in Italy for approximately ten years and moved to Munich, Germany in 1556.  In Munich, Lasso found employment and friendship under Albert V, the duke of Bavaria; he found love and married Regina Wackinger; and lived the rest of his life.

  4. Sacred music • Parody Masses • MisseBreves--"brief masses" meant for short services.  The most well known of this kind of work was his Jager Mass (The Hunters Mass) • Four setting of the Passion: St. Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. • His most famous Psalm setting is  the seven Penitential Psalms of David. The last movement of this psalm setting De profundis is considered to be one of the      "high-water marks of Renaissance polyphony." • Motets-- the 12 ProphetiaeSibyllarum (Prophecies of the Sibyl)

  5. Secular Music • Madrigals-- Lagrimedi San Pietro (Tears of Saint Peter, 1594), was a collection of madrigals with religious texts and his very last known work. • Chansons-- “Susanne un jour” (Susanna One Morn, after the Book of Daniel)  • Lieder

  6. Contemporaries and Role Models • Hosteda Reggio (Renaissance Italian madrigalist) • The Medici family (hard core Italian patrons of the arts) • Andrea Gabrieli (student) • Giovanni Gabrieli (student) • Philippe de Monte • JacobusVaet • Jacob Regnart • Giaches de Wert • Philippe Rodier • Palestrina • Victoria

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