Georg Prenner: Difference between revisions

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'''Aliases:''' Brenner, Pyrenaeus
{{Aliases|Georg Brenner|Georg Pyrenaeus|Georgius Prenner}}
==Life==
==Life==
'''Born:''' c. 1545 Laibach (Ljubljana)
'''Born:''' c. 1545 Laibach (Ljubljana)
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==List of choral works==
==List of choral works==
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*[[Novi thesauri musici (Pietro Giovannelli)|''Novi atque catholicus thesaurus musicus'']] (Venice: A. Gardano; RISM 1568)
*[[Novi thesauri musici (Pietro Giovannelli)|''Novi atque catholicus thesaurus musicus'']] (Venice: A. Gardano; RISM 1568)
*Tricinia sacra ex diversis et probatis autoribus collecta (Nuremberg 1567)
*Tricinia sacra ex diversis et probatis autoribus collecta (Nuremberg 1567)
*Selectissimarum sacrarum cantionum flores (Louvain: P. Phalèse; RISM 1569)
*''[[Selectissimarum cantionum sacrarum flores (Pierre Phalèse)|Selectissimarum sacrarum cantionum flores]]'' (Louvain: P. Phalèse; RISM 1569)


==External links==
==External links==

Latest revision as of 20:24, 2 March 2024

Aliases: Georg Brenner; Georg Pyrenaeus; Georgius Prenner

Life

Born: c. 1545 Laibach (Ljubljana)

Died: 4 February 1590

Biography Although he was salaried as a music copyist in the 1550's and composing during the next decade, Prenner's primary career was as a cleric. He matriculated at Vienna in 1551, was ordained 1561, became chaplain (1565) and priest (1567) at the court of Maximillian II, Abbot of Sankt Dorothea, Vienna (1572) and Herzogenburg, St Pölten (1578), and Imperial Councilor (1587).

View the Wikipedia article on Georg Prenner.

List of choral works

 
Click here to search for this composer on CPDL

Publications

Some 40 motets survive in various anthologies:

External links