Martin Agricola
- See Agricola for several other people of the same name.
Martin Agricola (6 January 1486 – 10 June 1556) was a German composer of Renaissance music and a music theorist.[1][lower-alpha 1]
Contents
Biography
Agricola was born in Schwiebus in Lower Silesia.[2][3]
From 1524 until his death he lived at Magdeburg, where he occupied the post of teacher or cantor in the Protestant school. The senator and music-printer Georg Rhau, of Wittenberg, was a close friend of Agricola, whose theoretical works, providing valuable material concerning the change from the old to the new system of notation, he published.[3]
Among Agricola's other theoretical works is Musica instrumentalis deudsch (1529), a study of musical instruments, and one of the most important works in early organology; and one of the earliest books on the Rudiments of music.[3]
Agricola was also the first to harmonize in four parts Martin Luther's chorale, Ein feste Burg.[3]
Notes
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References
- Attribution
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Further reading
- Classical Composers Database
- Free scores by Martin Agricola at the International Music Score Library Project
- Free scores by Martin Agricola in the Choral Public Domain Library (ChoralWiki)
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- ↑ His German name was Sohr or Sore (Chisholm 1911)
- ↑ Lutheran Cyclopedia entry on Agricola, Martin.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Chisholm 1911.
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- Pages with reference errors
- Wikipedia articles incorporating a citation from the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica with Wikisource reference
- 1486 births
- 1556 deaths
- People from Świebodzin
- German classical composers
- Renaissance composers
- German music theorists
- Silesian-German people
- Classical composers of church music
- German male classical composers
- German composer stubs
- Music theory stubs