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Bản dịch gốc

Sanctus. Franchino Gaffurio. A cappella. Sacred , Mass. Language. Latin. SATB.

Bản dịch

Sanctus. Franchino Gaffurio. Một cappella. Thiêng liêng, thánh lễ. Ngôn ngư. Latin. SATB.

Bản dịch gốc

The Librone are four manuscript choir books in large format. so the entire choir could read from a single book. copied around the turn of the 15th century under the direction of Gaffurio, the cathedral choirmaster. They contain works by many of the great composers of the late 1400s, as well as Gaffurio himself, almost all of whose output is found nowhere else. Then, as now, he was better known as the theorist Franchinus Gaffurius. the Latin form of his name. , than as a composer. This isolated Sanctus. not part of a unified setting of the entire Ordinary of the Mass, or of the shortened version used in the Ambrosian Rite at Milan. is one of two pieces from Librone II which had not been transcribed into modern notation at the time of the facsimile edition, and a search of the literature has not revealed any indication that it has been done since. It is anonymous in the manuscript, but is written in Gaffurio's hand, as was all the music in the Librone which is attributed to him. and since it is unique to this source, there is no evidence it was written by anyone else.

Bản dịch

The Librone are four manuscript choir books in large format. so the entire choir could read from a single book. copied around the turn of the 15th century under the direction of Gaffurio, the cathedral choirmaster. They contain works by many of the great composers of the late 1400s, as well as Gaffurio himself, almost all of whose output is found nowhere else. Then, as now, he was better known as the theorist Franchinus Gaffurius. the Latin form of his name. , than as a composer. This isolated Sanctus. not part of a unified setting of the entire Ordinary of the Mass, or of the shortened version used in the Ambrosian Rite at Milan. is one of two pieces from Librone II which had not been transcribed into modern notation at the time of the facsimile edition, and a search of the literature has not revealed any indication that it has been done since. It is anonymous in the manuscript, but is written in Gaffurio's hand, as was all the music in the Librone which is attributed to him. and since it is unique to this source, there is no evidence it was written by anyone else.