User:Antandrus/contribs

A man looks with pride at his woodpile.
Thoreau, Walden
Erudition, n. Dust shaken out of a book into an empty skull.
Ambrose Bierce, Devil's Dictionary
Do your work, with mastery.
Dhammapada

Stuff I've done, interspersed with scurrilous POV commentary which I can't put anywhere else.


Contents

From scratch:

Most recent first.

Antonio Squarcialupi 15th century organist, owner of eponymous Squarcialupi Codex (ooh, gotta write that one)
Tod und Verklärung Tone poem by Richard Strauss, rescued from the Speedy Axe. There isn't much there yet, but this could be a respectable article.
Vaclav Nelhybel 20th century composer of music for student performers.
Lagrime di San Pietro Stunningly beautiful masterpiece of the late Renaissance, indeed one of the most spectacular musical achievements of the age.
Sierra Madre Mountains Remote and beautiful.
Andreas Hammerschmidt German early to middle Baroque; I like this stuff. So there.
Hope Ranch, California Somewhere I know kinda well.
Claudio Saracini Italian monodist; actually influenced by music from the Balkans, if you can believe Grove (and I do).
Pietro Raimondi. Kind of a nut; a 19th century Ives, but who wrote in actually a conservative idiom. He just liked to have two or three operas playing simultaneously in the same hall.
Aleksandr Taneyev, uncle of the more famous Sergei. Guess I'm doing Russian stuff now.
Symphony No. 5 by Tchaikovsky. I couldn't resist adding a couple of the juiciest bad reviews in the Slonimsky collection.
Symphony No. 1 by Edward Elgar. Magnificent piece; during that A-flat "nobilmente" tune I can see as though through a fog a vision of gin-and-soda guzzling Britons holding in subjugation entire nations of millions, I see General Charles George Gordon (as played by Charlton Heston) speared in Khartoum, and I see the ruins of a magnificent empire; but what a marvelous ruins they are indeed. Someday we will have our own ruins to memorialize, and I sure hope our music is as good as this. Oh, and as a subtle tribute to the ghosts of British nationalism rattling about in this splendid pair of pieces, I used UK spelling. Go ahead and laugh.
Symphony No. 2 by Edward Elgar. An even more magnificent piece: "a tender Götterdämmerung for the entire Edwardian age."
Three Places in New England Great piece by Charles Ives. Might be shifting direction here. There are an enormous number of unwritten articles on major compositions.
W. de Wycombe English composer of the late 13th century: may have been the composer of the Reading Rota (Sumer is icumen in), but really only 50/50 chance.
Old Hall MS The biggest single source for Medieval English music; magnificent manuscript that miraculously survived all the various barbaric and destructive idiocies of the 15th, 16th, and 17th centuries.
Thomas Ashwell Composer of the very early 16th century, possibly the teacher of John Taverner. Some things survive but not much.
Symphony No. 4 (Tchaikovsky) An anon clicked on the redlink and wrote the eloquent substub "rrrr." Such a significantly promising start deserves a decent followup. You know, a lot of really major pieces don't even have stubs yet. There's a lot here left to do indeed.
Claudio Pari; Sicilian madrigalist. He was lucky he wasn't burned at the stake, getting off with only five years in the galleys. Interesting music you won't hear during a half-time show.
French classical music Just an insignificant stub for now, but could be an enormous article, along with the parallel articles for other countries. Currently there is nowhere in Wikipedia for music history at this level of detail, by culture, country, or region, and this is one damn big omission.
Eton Choirbook My first significant music article since becoming an admin. Wow. Enough Wikicopping, already, have to get back to what I am actually good at.
Gaviota State Park Yet another non-music article, this one about one of my favorite places to go and not think about anything at all. Also only my second article since becoming an admin; guess I have to prove to myself that being an admin won't interfere with my ability to write stuff.
Hummingbird sage One of my favorite native plants here; added a pic I took not far away. Doing a few non-music things for a change.
Berkeley Barb Made a stub to save an anon comment from a speedy. Man, I wish I had saved some of these. Never knew they'd be valuable someday.
viola organista A strange musical instrument invented by Leonardo da Vinci. The only picture I can find I cannot copy, unfortunately. This odd beast used a continuously moving horsehair bow to play the strings, which the keyboard player pressed into the bow by the action of his fingers. Alas they didn't have one at my corner music store.
Carrizo Plain Still needs some pics; I have tons, it's choosing that is the problem.
Leonel Power Just a stub for now; finish it later when I have a full tank.
Loys Bourgeois Did you know he went to prison for changing a few notes in a well-known psalm tune? Hey, praise the Lord, but don't miss any notes. --Not quite happy with this article yet though; finish still.
Alonso Mudarra Spanish composer and vihuelist; the first guy in history to publish music for that thing called a "guitar."
Claude Le Jeune The most famous French composer of the late 16th century, and there wasn't even a stub there yet. But now there is! Rah! Still needs some more tweaking, as well as a writeup of the marvelous Octonaires de la vanité et inconstance du monde (yeah, I'm old enough to know all about that).
Jacques Mauduit Composer of musique mesurée; starting on this group now
Henry Eichheim American composer, early user of gamelan in a western context
Charles Theodore Pachelbel Son of the composer of the Taco Bell Canon. Bet you didn't know he died in Charleston, S.C. and was the principal musician there in the 1740s.
Marchetto da Padova Early 14th century theorist; the one on whose work the music of the Italian trecento is all founded.
Aurelian of Réôme Author of the oldest surviving treatise on music from the Middle Ages (c. 850)
Joonas Kokkonen A 20th century guy for a change; excellent composer, not done often enough here in the U.S.
Giovanni de Macque Neapolitan madrigalist, almost as adventurous as Gesualdo, except he didn't leave a trail of dead bodies wherever he went.
Geisslerlieder. Monty Python actually had it right (except that the book-swinging monks sing in Latin). The songs the flagellants sang.
Filippo Filippi, Italian music critic, friend or admirer of Verdi (a little unclear just what Verdi thought of him). Had a stublet.
Ney Rosauro Just started a stub to save the non-entry from being speedied; I'll let someone else finish this one, since I've never heard his music.
Rhythmic mode Really need musical examples. Maybe a recording too.
Johannes de Garlandia No, he didn't write De mensurabili musica, but since ever reference book says he did, he gets the article under his name. He did edit it though.
Johannes Cotto Formerly Johannes Afflighemensis, now known to have worked in south Germany; treatise on organum of around 1100. You won't find it in the paperbacks in the supermarket checkout line, but only because I don't have say-so over what goes there.
Conductus Found a tiny stublet marked for death by Wiktionary.
Franco of Cologne First to propose that the a note could signify its own duration as well as pitch; mid 13th century.
Hernando Franco Early colonial era composer in Guatemala and Mexico.
Petrus A huge disambig page; also to remind me to write articles about the many medieval music theorists named Petrus.
Bernardo Pisano The first madrigalist. Well, it's arguable; he didn't use the term, but stylistically it is pretty obvious. Also the first composer anywhere to have a printed collection of his secular music all to himself.
Johannes Nucius German theorist: one of the first major writers on rhetoric and music.
Notes inégales. French performance practice, mainly, with some surrounding history. That wasn't so easy. It's quite muddy, the sources are contradictory, and distilling it down to a less-than-dissertation size article is challenging.
Johannes Brassart Burgundian; moved around a lot, was in the papal chapel with Dufay and Arnold de Lantins; good, underrated composer.
Nicolas Grenon Lived to be more than 80 years old, 1375-1456; early Renaissance and late Medieval composer, and his work in both epochs challenges the definitions of just what those terms mean.
Juan Pérez de Gijón Now that was a challenge. Not exactly "Classical Top 40."
Giulio Belli Another; contemporary of the Venetian school, but he worked alongside them, elsewhere nearby.
Johannes Prioris Still filling in the also-rans, some of whom wrote some really good music. Second-earliest surviving polyphonic Requiem mass.
Ruggiero Giovannelli Roman School composer, post-Palestrina; wrote some rather light-hearted music for a Counter-Reformation priest. Interesting.
Gymel. No, it has nothing to do with thirds. (If this seems like a non sequitur, you haven't studied musicology with one of the "old school.")
Saint Cassian of Imola What's not to love, for this former college teacher? A man stabbed to death by his own students, for refusing to bow to popular culture. LOL.
Giammateo Asola Veronese, lived in Venice, obviously despised the Venetian school music; it would be fun to know more about just what was going on there. Did he feel snubbed by the splendor of St. Mark's nearby?
Pedro de Escobar Another early Portuguese composer; actually one of the earliest whose music has survived. I think he had a tough life.
Giacomo Antonio Perti Italian Baroque composer, sadly neglected. Had a stub.
La Conchita, California Sad place today; real close to home.
Jean Japart One of the Milanese chapel composers.
Musica ficta Thanks Opus for alerting me to this enormous redlink.
Tarquinio Merula Another interesting and underrated Italian early Baroque composer.
Stefano Landi Early Baroque opera composer.
Nicola Vicentino Famously hard to explain. Interesting and quite influential though; I wish I had his arcicembalo.
Gioseffo Guami Another Venetian; organist, composer, teacher, singer, string player, friend of Lassus, just generally a great guy
Hugo de Lantins Franco-Flemish composer active in Italy, around 1430, during that strange, almost dead time musically (though really it might just be because little has survived), right on the crack between the medieval and Renaissance periods.
Arnold de Lantins Probably Hugo's brother, but I can't reasonably put my guess in the Wikipedia article, now can I?
Supply Belcher American Revolutionary War era composer. Yup, that's really his name.
Maddalena Casulana, Article No. 200, first female composer to have music printed (1568)
Anna Guarini One of the three singers of the concerto di donne at Ferrara; murdered by her husband who suspected her of adultery
Lodovico Agostini Interesting Ferrarese composer of the late 16th c.
Chioggia Italian town south of Venice; got tired of seeing the redlink. It could use some more detail.
Jacques Buus Early Venetian, though he was Flemish originally; Protestant no less.
Annibale Padovano Another Venetian; early composer of toccatas.
Vincenzo Bellavere Yet another Venetian. On a roll.
Giovanni Bassano Another Venetian, this one a cornettist. That's two Ts.
Villanella Banged out a quickie here. Could use some more attention when I'm awake.
Giovanni Croce Important Venetian school member; are there any left to write?
Canzonetta It's rare to nab one that has 11 or 12 redlinks to it already. Important light secular Italian form of the late 16th century, and after.
Baldassare Donato Another underrated Venetian composer. He was probably kind of a pain in the ass where he worked.
String Quartet No. 8 (Beethoven). And this really is the music I know best; I find it hard to do it justice. Just a start on this one. By the way I find it difficult to use numbered titles; most musicians refer to them by opus numbers (this one is Opus 59, No. 2)
Naumburg Biggish town in Germany; made a stub with the essentials.
Claudio Veggio Pretty obscure, but what is really cool is that we actually have his working drafts. This is one of the earliest such survivals.
Elias Ammerbach Organist, the first to publish organ music in Germany, but not the last.
Hilaire Penet Very fine composer, a Renaissance one-hit wonder.
Harmonices Mundi That bizarre book by Johannes Kepler which explained the music of the spheres, and the real reasons for misery and famine on the Earth.
Christoph Demantius German, compiled the first dictionary of musical terms; somehow survived the 30 Years War.
Musica reservata was to the mid-16th century what the ars subtilior was to the late 14th, and what total serialism was to the 20th. Roughly, but the parallels are there. Or so I think.
Chorale motet
Hieronymus Praetorius The second-most-famous member of the distinguished Praetorius family. Egg on my face; I had just told my sister that this was really Michael with a Latin name. LOL. As an act of penance, I hereby put up this article.
Jean Maillard Minor French composer after Mouton; someone needs to research his life--it's a Ph.D. dissertation waiting to happen
Johannes Lupi
Francisco de Peńalosa Spanish; generation after Josquin, died young
Conrad Paumann German; organist; blind from birth.
Johann Andreas Herbst There's a silly picture of him in Grove I wish I could scan. But I can't, cuz I follow the rules.
Kryštof Harant z Polžic a Bezdružic Tempted to start a [[Category:beheaded composers]] ...
Ignazio Donati Practical guy; northern Italian; sweet and cheerful stuff.
Johannes Martini Minor, but interesting composer, in that Milan choir I would love to have heard (1474, no good recordings survive)
Joseph de Marliave Good Romantic era writer on Beethoven, maybe he was formative on me because I read his commentary on the Beethoven quartets when I was a teenager. I know this style of writing is out of fashion but it is moving, it is descriptive, and it helps open this music up to those who don't already know it. He was killed in World War I, right at the start, probably in the Battle of the Frontiers but I can't find out for sure.
Pierre Moulu Gorgeous music, lost in the "dark backward and abysm of time."
Mathieu Gascongne Relatively minor French court composer of early 16th c.
Felix Salzer Extremely influential popularizer of Heinrich Schenker's theories, at least on the left side of the Atlantic.
Robin Mallapert Palestrina's teacher. Otherwise quite obscure.
Federico Mompou Catalan miniaturist; lovely stuff. Thanks Dolors for turning me on to this lovely, meditative music.
Alessandro Striggio Wrote a huge 40-part motet, after Tallis the only one I know.
Hugh Aston Quickie on another early Tudor composer.
Pomponio Nenna Associate of the Prince of Venosa. Getting ready to write his article.
Marco da Gagliano musician to the Medici, early 17th c.
Galeazzo Maria Sforza Duke of Milan, patron of music. There's more to history than endless wars and murders, and his incredible patronage of the arts--especially music--often goes unnoticed in standard reference books.
Franchinus Gaffurius Friend of Leonardo, superb theorist and composer.
Pierre Certon important French composer, post-Josquin generation; the first of the chanson composers I have done; there are a bunch of others to get to now...
Gaspar van Weerbeke Rather innovative in some ways and downright reactionary in others. Good luck finding recordings of his music though.
Jacquet of Mantua Another fine composer you won't find in the CD bins at your corner hip-hop shop.
Alberti Disambig page; a rather long one. There's a lot of Albertis.
Richard Pohl Music critic, opposed to Hanslick, Wagnerian.
Bicinium This is totally obscure.
Carpentras Fine composer, who left Rome when Adrian VI came to the papacy. Flee from the Philistines.
Melchior Franck German, transitional Renaissance/Baroque, wrote chorale motets (don't forget to write that one)
Chorale monody Not many; not much to write; but they're pretty cool.
Chorale concerto Not the usual kind of concerto; lovely things, especially the ones by Praetorius. Still need to mention the influence of the Thirty Years War in the reduction of available instrumental forces, and the evaporation of the grand Venetian style north of the Alps (most of the players were dead--thanks to Gustavus Adolphus, Tilly, their murderous gangs of thugs, and the typhus they brought which depopulated Germany)
Chorale cantata Boundaries between this and the other types of chorale settings are fuzzy, as are most boundaries in the arts (and everything else for that matter)
Jean Mouton Important figure, but I'm starting to feel the need for musical examples.
Chorale setting. OK, it's a start.
Chorale prelude. A shorty. Need a bigger article on Chorale setting.
Bálint Bakfark Hungarian lutenist. It's ok, I hadn't heard of him either.
Francesca Caccini Most influential female composer in the 700 years between Hildegard and Clara Schumann.
Thomas Coryat Not a musician, but a travel writer, and one who wrote in gorgeous detail about the splendor of the music of the Venetian school.
Giulio Caccini Finally! Biggest one I have written for a while, and the most important composer to remain empty so long.
Ignaz Pleyel He wrote lots more than duets, but what second-year violinist knows that? Oh, the article's not done yet. Just a start
Alfred Einstein Short for now. Did you know he was Albert's cousin?
Girolamo Dalla Casa Venetian; instrumentalist and composer
Johann Michael Vogl Schubert's close friend, and intended singer for much of his best work. Thank you for providing the inspiration for some of the most beautiful vocal writing in the history of western civilization.
Tafelmusik Once again, to save a stublet from a speedy.
Satyagraha (opera) Someone opened the article with the single profound line, "aaaa". It's always a challenge to save something like this from being speedied. Call it a game.
Filippo de Lurano Another frottolist; Cesare Borgia's favorite.
Marchetto Cara The nicer of the two frottolists (Tromboncino was in trouble a lot, including murdering his wife and her lover; though, ironically, THIS trouble he got out of)
Paolo Quagliati
Giovanni Francesco Anerio Finally. Removed a completely-wrong 1911 EB stub. SO much has been done on cataloging and studying this music in the last hundred years ... some day I'll write a rant on what one should and shouldn't use that great 1911 encyclopedia for.
Paolo Bellasio Seems to have had great connections, and medium talent, and rather poor luck.
Bartolomeo Barbarino
Juan Pujol Catalan, NOT Spanish, composer.
Sigismondo d'India Another great, underrated, indeed almost unknown composer in Italy contemporary with Monteverdi, in that fascinating Renaissance-to-Baroque time
Robert de Févin brother of Antoine, less famous
Antoine de Févin Another of the Franco-Flemish guys, and a fine one; died young
Walter Frye Combined a dumbstub and a simultaneously created goodstub. Still needs some more.
Pietro Cerone Influential and extremely windbaggy theorist of early 17th century Naples.
Johann Joseph Fux Wrote the most influential book on counterpoint ever penned.
The Old Maid and the Thief Someone put it up with a "save page" and I just had to save it from being speedied.
George Kirbye, English madrigalist.
Three Sisters Wilderness a quickie, to save a drive-by stublet from being speedied
Thomas Tomkins
Thomas Ravenscroft from a stublet, though someone kindly had a picture there first.
San Rafael Mountains
Symphony No. 10 (just a dumb disambig page--I'm lazy this morning)
Symphony No. 11
Santa Ynez Mountains Had to do something non-music for a change.
John Bull (composer) (had a substub) (Here was a guy who had trouble keeping his pants on, and very nearly lost his "upper" head)
Luis de Milán
Manuel Mendes
Manuel Cardoso
Sostenuto (from requested articles list)
Duarte Lobo starting on the Portuguese guys of their peculiarly late "Renaissance"
Alonso Lobo
Giovanni Bernardino Nanino I see sibling rivalry between these two. Look how they avoided each other's forms, or when writing in the same forms used opposite styles. Res omnes non mutantor.
Giovanni Maria Nanino
Thomas Morley (biggie; there were 16 links already to him)
Lodovico Zacconi (expand from stublet) (if anyone ever reads this it's a miracle)
Universe symphony (Charles Ives) (expand from a sublet)
Intermezzo New article No. 100!
Serenade Finally.
Manfred Bukofzer got tired of seeing the red link all the time.
Fitzwilliam Virginal Book (there was a sub-stub there)
Santa Barbara Channel and something non-music for a change.
Antonio Cifra
Francesco Soriano
Felice Anerio starting on the 17th century Roman School guys.
Emilio de' Cavalieri
Loyset Compčre
Sinfonia (some more examples, and more about 20th century wouldn't hurt)
Pierre de La Rue
Olin Downes (had a substub)
Alessandro Grandi
Alexander Agricola
Bartolomeo Tromboncino
Tielman Susato
Thomas Crecquillon
Gustave Reese Musicologist; the most amazingly thorough of them all
Marc Antonio Ingegneri (Monteverdi's teacher; "adjunct faculty" of Roman School)
Domenico Allegri
Roman School Finally.
Alfonso Ferrabosco Hugely influential, almost unknown, and really kind of a shady character.
Anonymous IV Probably the most famous of all the "numbered" Anonymi.
English Madrigal School
Notre Dame school
Giovanni de' Bardi Had this energetic, audacious, interesting adventurer been killed at the siege of Malta, or in the savage struggles against Suleiman's army in Hungary, music history would be incomprehensibly different. No monody, no recitative, possibly no opera.
Antoine Busnois Yup, he really did write a chanson called Terrible dame, and it means the same in English that it does in Old French.
Hayne van Ghizeghem Interesting guy; I would love to write my speculations about his late career into the article, but can't and won't. After the siege of Beauvais, if he was not killed, but remained (anonymously) working at the court of France, it is certainly possible that he was captured--but could not go home again because Charles would have thought him a traitor. Eager to compete with Burgundy as a center of culture, musical and otherwise, the King of France (Louis XI) probably wouldn't have had any trouble hiring him; he was busy bringing scholars and artists and musicians from all over Europe. Hayne's life would make a great historical novel, or even, god forbid, an opera.
Gilles Binchois (well, ok, there was a single line from 1911 EB there first)
Burgundian School
air de cour (incredibly popular for thirty years in France... one wonders, in four hundred years, will anyone have heard of "hip-hop," "rock," or "country"?)
Hans Leo Hassler (Another underrated composer, one who brought that magnificent Venetian style north)
Bartolomé de Escobedo
Venetian School I might be the only one left in the world who loves this stuff, but so be it
Costanzo Porta
Girolamo Diruta
Claudio Merulo
intermedio
Venetian polychoral style
polychoral (someone else merged it with "antiphon" which is a very different thing, but I'll leave it for now)
Heinrich Scheidemann
Johann Schein
Z-relation Heh. Felt like writing a really abstruse one.
ricercar
Johann Mattheson This is even too obscure for Grove... but the music and rhetoric stuff is important, IMHO
prolation canon
Cantus In Memoriam Benjamin Britten (by Arvo Pärt; heard it to my great surprise in Michael Moore's Fahrenheit 9/11 and was greatly relieved to see it in the credits, thinking of the Gladiator and the Kubrick-Ligeti nastinesses)
rota (music)
madrigale spirituale
concertato
Madrigal comedy
George Whitefield Chadwick
Horatio Parker
Alessandro Stradella
Lai
Symphony No. 10 (Beethoven)
Lodovico Grossi da Viadana
Bluebeard's Castle
wind quintet
Josef Matthias Hauer
Tioga Pass (the first of these not included in the New Grove)
Nicholas Yonge
Luca Marenzio
Francisco Guerrero
Tomas de Santa Maria
cyclic form
Pietro Aron
Heinrich Glarean
Philippe de Monte
Cristóbal de Morales
Ars subtilior
Ars nova
Ars antiqua
Martinus Fabri
Pierre de Manchicourt
Comic opera
Lute song
Giovanni Artusi
Frottola
Laude
Philippe de Vitry
Jacob Obrecht
Florentine Camerata
Johannes Tinctoris
Girolamo Mei
Vincenzo Galilei
Anthony Philip Heinrich
Nicolas Gombert
Constanzo Festa
Claude Goudimel
Charles Tomlinson Griffes
Albert Roussel
Johann Ladislaus Dussek
Jacques Arcadelt
Philippe Verdelot
Samuel Scheidt
Charles Valentin Alkan (Now merged into Charles-Valentin Alkan which already existed--hey, I was a newbie then.)
Jan Pieterszoon Sweelinck
Luzzasco Luzzaschi (needs fattening--important figure, and it was my first Wikipedia article)

Years in music

These were from scratch, but I just don't like listing them with "real" articles since they involve no writing, per se:

1591 in music Man I must be bored today. Enough for now.
1590 in music Procedure: add stuff I know off the top of my head; look at all links to 1590; search for 1590 in Grove; search for the year in the Renaissance and Baroque music articles; google "year music country"
1573 in music Births and deaths for now.
1572 in music Just a start for now. Here's the better way: use the advanced search feature in Grove: can do births, deaths, place, occupation; then you can search the works lists by date. Wow.
1571 in music It takes me longer to write one of these than it does a full composer bio. Strange.
1570 in music I thought these would be easy pages for when I'm feeling tired and stupid, but they're tough to research.

Templates

Template:Graphical timeline for 20th century classical composers. Began it, anyway.

Categories

Began a lot of them, and I add a lot of articles to them, but I'm not keeping score.

Images

I photograph a lot of stuff, but I'm too lazy to list everything. Mostly local landmarks, plants and critters in the wild.

Major rewrites or significant additions:

Cypriano de Rore. Major composer of the middle 16th century, principally of madrigals. There was a stubbish article there already. Piano key frequencies. Fixed the numbering, flipped it so it wasn't upside down, fixed the frequencies. Only listing it because it was such a pain in the ass.
History of music. The first time I have worked on a Collaboration of the Week (who else is going to write about medieval music?) This should be fun, and I'm looking forward to what others add. Well, mostly.
1875 in music Listing it not because it's super-important, but because working on these is so tedious and time-consuming. Yet when I'm not up to writing expository prose these are a good filler.
Joseph Solomon Delmedigo Bet you haven't heard of him. Cretan/Jewish philosopher and music theorist, born 1591.
Carlo Gesualdo There was a little article here so I can't claim it from scratch; maybe my longest article to date (when the Wiki is slow I write offline ... which isn't too bad a way to go)
Organum And more on the way.
Giovanni Battista Guarini Added his considerable significance to music history.
Gábor Darvas Fattened a stub.
American classical music I've changed it a bit, to put it mildly, up to the last section, which I haven't the energy to tackle quite yet.
Adriano Banchieri Was a 1911 stub, expanded a bit; not quite done yet
Orazio Vecchi Can't claim it was from scratch, since there were a couple lines there; but major expansion
Music of Spain Everything from Isidore of Seville to the 19th century (not done yet)
Jean Richafort Expanded a stub. Could have more.
The Bartered Bride Expanded a stub. It really needs act divisions and synopsis.
Adrian Willaert Gradually abolishing the Catholic Encyclopedia article.
Carl Orff Added the Nazi period writeup. If only he were in the White Rose ... but then they would have killed him.
Ottaviano Petrucci Filled out a stub.
L'homme armé Added a bunch; thanks to Linuxlad for starting this essential Renaissance music article.
Jacob Clemens non Papa Added a bunch; could add more still.
Guillaume de Machaut Not nearly done; just added bio details so far.
Orfeo added plot, details, bunch of stuff
Bergamo added the stuff on music history; needs art, architecture, and contemporary history and culture to balance the article though
Gioseffo Zarlino The first to deal with the triad rather than the interval; the most important theorist between Aristoxenus and Rameau
Thomas Ford another of the early 17th century English guys; this stuff is surprisingly hard to sort out--it resists being jammed into the square holes of Renaissance and Baroque as defined elsewhere in Europe.
Giovanni Gabrieli (plenty more to do here)
Cristofano Malvezzi
Cremona (added the stuff about history and music history)
John Dunstable
Pange Lingua (added all the stuff on music for this great old Latin hymn)
Arnolt Schlick (expanded from a quasistub)
Music of Catalonia (added all the non-pop non-folk I could find in Grove)
Barcarolle (filled out a stub)
Berceuse (filled out a stub)
Shakers (added the part on music)
Santa Barbara County, California
Frederic Rzewski
Vihuela
Peter Racine Fricker
Andrea Gabrieli (not quite done yet)
Antoine Brumel
Agostino Agazzari
divertimento
canzone
chorale
monody
Enrique Granados
Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina
Johannes Ockeghem
Leonin
Medieval music
Renaissance music
Baroque music
Trecento-Madrigal
Josquin des Prez
Tomas Luis de Victoria
Seikilos epitaph
Heinrich Schütz

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