Johannes de Fossa
Life
Born: ~ 1540
Died: 1603
Biography
While his name is suggestive of Fosses, a small town near Liège, none of the several musicians with the name ‘de Fossa’ in the archives is called Johannes. When he copied a Te Deum by Jean Guyot (1512-1588; choirmaster of St Paul Liège 1546-1554 and of the cathedral 1558-1563) de Fossa claimed to have been his pupil. A Johannes de Fossa is mentioned in a letter from Duke Philibert of Savoy dated 12 January 1557, but the first precise information known about Fossa is that in 1569 he was appointed second Kapellmeister at the Munich court. In 1571 he became master of the choristers and continued in the service of the Dukes of Bavaria until his death. After the death of Orlando di Lasso in 1594 Fossa took responsibility for the chapel music and in 1597 he was given the official title of first Kapellmeister. On his retirement in 1602 he was succeeded by Ferdinand di Lasso, eldest son of Orlando.
Proske noted that in his compositions Fossa was influenced by Lassus, as one might expect, though not lacking a style and charm of his own.
View the Wikipedia article on Johannes de Fossa.
List of choral works
List from Collected Works ed. (Recent Researches in Music of the Renaissance xxviii–xxix, 1978):
- Antiphons for Palm Sunday
- Ardo, sì, ma non t'amo
- Maria zart von edler Art
- Missa
- Missa
- Missa
- Missa
- Missa
- {{NoCo|Stabat Mater 4vv bc
- Vidi aquas (unattributed, but same source as other works)
Click here to search for this composer on CPDL
Publications
External links
- Works by Johannes de Fossa in the Petrucci Music Library (IMSLP)
- blog, viewable by invitation [?]