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Carlo Gesualdo

Index Carlo Gesualdo

Carlo Gesualdo da Venosa (8 March 1566 – 8 September 1613) was Prince of Venosa and Count of Conza. [1]

187 relations: A Sei Voci, Agostino Agresta, Alessandro Grandi, Alex Ross bibliography, Alfonso d'Este, Lord of Montecchio, Alfonso Fontanelli, Alfonso Gesualdo, All the Pretty Little Horses (album), Amarcord (ensemble), Anna Guarini, Antonio Cifra, Ars Nova Singers, Åke Parmerud, Baroque music, Bartolomeo Tromboncino, Basilicata, Benedetto Pallavicino, Brett Dean, Cantiones sacrae (Gesualdo), Cecil Gray (composer), Charles Ravier, Charlotte Salomon (opera), Chromaticism, Chronological list of Italian classical composers, Cinquecento, Classical music, Claude Le Jeune, Claudio Monteverdi, Claudio Pari, Collegium Vocale Köln, Composer tributes (classical music), Concerto delle donne, Constanze Backes, Count of Conza, Culture of Italy, Delitiæ Musicæ, Don Carlos (disambiguation), Douai Abbey, Duchy of Ferrara, ECM Records, Edmund de Waal, Eleonora d'Este (1561-1637), Ercole Pasquini, Francesco Cera, Francesco d'Avalos, Francesco Rasi, Gesù Nuovo, Gesualdo, Gesualdo Six, Gesualdo, Campania, ..., Gesualdo: Death for Five Voices, Giovan Leonardo Primavera, Giovanni Balducci, Giovanni Battista Guarini, Giovanni de Macque, Giovanni Maria Trabaci, Girolamo Frescobaldi, Giulia della Rovere, Glenn Watkins, Goldberg Variations, Gramophone Classical Music Awards, Harry van der Kamp, Hilliard Ensemble, History of music, Holy Week, House of Carafa, I Dream of Jeannie Cusamano, Igor Stravinsky, Il Perdono di Gesualdo, Imogen Holst, Inganno, Irpinia, Italian Renaissance, Italy, Jacobus Gallus, James Wood (musician), Jürg Baur, Joe Coleman (painter), Jonathan Biss, Kampen, Overijssel, La Venexiana, László Passuth, Leçons de ténèbres, Leçons de ténèbres (Couperin), Les Arts Florissants (ensemble), List of Baroque composers, List of Catholic musicians, List of classical music composers by era, List of composers by name, List of compositions by Carlo Gesualdo, List of historical opera characters, List of Italian composers, List of Italians, List of Monumentum pro Gesualdo casts, List of music biographies in Rees's Cyclopaedia, List of people from Southern Italy, List of people with major depressive disorder, List of Renaissance composers, List of Renaissance figures, Lodovico Agostini, Love's Sacrifice, Luca Francesconi, Luca Marenzio, Luci mie traditrici, Luzzasco Luzzaschi, Maddalena Casulana, Madrigal, Madrigale spirituale, March 8, Michelangelo Rossi, Milva, Modernism, Monumentum pro Gesualdo, Motet, Mpiri, Music history of Italy, Music of Basilicata, Music of Campania, Musica reservata, National Book Award for Nonfiction, Nicola Vicentino, Noël Akchoté, O vos omnes, October 16, Oltremontani, Orlanda Velez Isidro, Orlande de Lassus, Oxford Camerata, Palazzo di Sangro, Paolo Quagliati, Passion (music), Péter Eötvös, Perfect fourth, Peter Warlock, Pierre Boulez, Pomponio Nenna, Prince Carlos, Private Passions, Psalm 51, Raimondo di Sangro, Renaissance music, Responsories for Holy Week, Responsory, Rinaldo dall'Arpa, Robert Craft, Robert Fraser (writer), Rocco Rodio, Schauet doch und sehet, ob irgend ein Schmerz sei, BWV 46, Scipione Dentice, Scipione Lacorcia, Scipione Stella, Scott Glasgow, September 8, Sigismondo d'India, Simone Molinaro, Sinan Savaskan, Singer Pur, St Peter's, Eastern Hill, Stefano Felis, String Quartets (Ligeti), Tenebrae, Tenebrae Responsoria (Gesualdo), The Doors of Perception, The righteous perishes, Threni (Stravinsky), Timeline of musical events, Timeline of trends in Italian music, Torquato Tasso, Tristan chord, Tristis est anima mea (responsory), True Story (film), Venosa, Venosa (disambiguation), Vittorio Baldini, William Lawes, 1565 in music, 1566, 1566 in music, 1590 in music, 1594 in music, 1595 in music, 1596 in music, 1603 in music, 1611 in music, 1613, 1613 in music, 59th Annual Grammy Awards. Expand index (137 more) »

A Sei Voci

The ensemble A Sei Voci was a French vocal group founded in 1977 and which ceased in 2011.

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Agostino Agresta

Agostino Agresta (fl. 1600–1617) was a Neapolitan composer working at the beginning of the 17th century, who can be seen as having been strongly influenced by Carlo Gesualdo.

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Alessandro Grandi

Alessandro Grandi (1590 – after June 1630, but in that year) was a northern Italian composer of the early Baroque era, writing in the new concertato style.

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Alex Ross bibliography

A list of the published works of music critic Alex Ross.

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Alfonso d'Este, Lord of Montecchio

Alfonso d'Este (10 March 1527 – 1 November 1587) was an Italian nobleman.

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Alfonso Fontanelli

Alfonso Fontanelli (15 February 1557 – 11 February 1622) was an Italian composer, writer, diplomat, courtier, and nobleman of the late Renaissance.

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Alfonso Gesualdo

Alfonso Gesualdo di Conza (20 October 1540–14 February 1603) was an Italian Cardinal, from 1561.

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All the Pretty Little Horses (album)

All the Pretty Little Horses (TheInmostLightItself) is an album by English band Current 93.

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Amarcord (ensemble)

amarcord is a German male classical vocal ensemble based in Leipzig, founded in 1992 by five former members of the Thomanerchor.

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Anna Guarini

Anna Guarini, Contessa Trotti (1563 – 3 May 1598) was an Italian virtuoso singer of the late Renaissance.

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Antonio Cifra

Antonio Cifra (1584? – 2 October 1629 in Loreto) was an Italian composer of the Roman School of the Renaissance and early Baroque eras.

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Ars Nova Singers

Ars Nova Singers The Ars Nova Chamber Singers is a choral ensemble based in Boulder, Colorado, USA.

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Åke Parmerud

Åke Parmerud (born 24 July 1953) is a Swedish composer, musician, and multimedia artist noted for his acoustic and electronic works, which have been performed mostly in Europe, Mexico, and Canada.

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Baroque music

Baroque music is a style of Western art music composed from approximately 1600 to 1750.

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Bartolomeo Tromboncino

Bartolomeo Tromboncino (c. 1470 – 1535 or later) was an Italian composer of the middle Renaissance.

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Basilicata

Basilicata, also known with its ancient name Lucania, is a region in Southern Italy, bordering on Campania to the west, Apulia (Puglia) to the north and east, and Calabria to the south.

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Benedetto Pallavicino

Benedetto Pallavicino (c. 1551 – 26 November 1601) was an Italian composer and organist of the late Renaissance.

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Brett Dean

Brett Dean (born 23 October 1961 in Brisbane) is a contemporary Australian composer, violist and conductor.

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Cantiones sacrae (Gesualdo)

The Sacrae Cantiones of Carlo Gesualdo da Venosa are two collections of motets published in 1603.

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Cecil Gray (composer)

Cecil Gray (1895–1951) was a Scottish music critic and composer.

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Charles Ravier

Charles Ravier (5 June 1934 – 5 March 1984) was a 20th-century French composer, music director and choral conductor.

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Charlotte Salomon (opera)

''Charlotte Salomon'', World Premiere at the Salzburg Festival 2014 Charlotte Salomon is an opera by Marc-André Dalbavie.

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Chromaticism

Chromaticism is a compositional technique interspersing the primary diatonic pitches and chords with other pitches of the chromatic scale.

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Chronological list of Italian classical composers

This is a chronological list of classical music composers from Italy, whose notability is established by reliable sources in other Wikipedia articles.

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Cinquecento

The cultural and artistic events of Italy during the period 1500 to 1599 are collectively referred to as the Cinquecento (from the Italian for the number 500, in turn from millecinquecento, which is Italian for the year 1500. Cinquecento encompasses the styles and events of the Italian Renaissance.

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Classical music

Classical music is art music produced or rooted in the traditions of Western culture, including both liturgical (religious) and secular music.

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Claude Le Jeune

Claude Le Jeune (1528 to 1530 – buried 26 September 1600) was a Franco-Flemish composer of the late Renaissance.

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Claudio Monteverdi

Claudio Giovanni Antonio Monteverdi (15 May 1567 (baptized) – 29 November 1643) was an Italian composer, string player and choirmaster.

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Claudio Pari

Claudio Pari (1574 – after 1619) was an Italian composer, of Burgundian birth, of the late Renaissance and early Baroque eras.

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Collegium Vocale Köln

Collegium Vocale Köln is a German vocal ensemble, founded in 1966 as a quintet when its members were still students at the Rheinische Musikschule in Cologne.

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Composer tributes (classical music)

Musical tributes or homages from one composer to another can take many forms.

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Concerto delle donne

The concerto delle donne (lit. consort of ladies) was a group of professional female singers in the late Renaissance court of Ferrara, Italy, renowned for their technical and artistic virtuosity.

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Constanze Backes

Constanze Backes is a classically trained German soprano in opera and concert.

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Count of Conza

Count of Conza was a Renaissance title held by several noble families of the Campania region in southern Italy, notably the Balvano, Gesualdo, and Mirelli families.

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Culture of Italy

Italy is considered the birthplace of Western civilization and a cultural superpower.

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Delitiæ Musicæ

Delitiae Musicae is an Italian classical instrumental and vocal ensemble.

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Don Carlos (disambiguation)

Don Carlos is an opera by Giuseppe Verdi, also known as Don Carlo.

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Douai Abbey

Douai Abbey is a Benedictine Abbey at Woolhampton, near Thatcham, in the English county of Berkshire, situated within the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portsmouth.

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Duchy of Ferrara

The Duchy of Ferrara (Ducato di Ferrara) was a sovereign state in what is now northern Italy.

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ECM Records

ECM (Edition of Contemporary Music) is an independent record label founded by Manfred Eicher in Munich in 1969.

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Edmund de Waal

Edmund Arthur Lowndes de Waal, OBE (born 10 September 1964) is a British artist, and author of The Hare with Amber Eyes, published in 2010, and The White Road, published in 2015.

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Eleonora d'Este (1561-1637)

Eleonora d'Este (1561-1637) was a Ferrarese noblewoman.

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Ercole Pasquini

Ercole Pasquini (ca. 1560 – between 1608 and 1619) was an Italian composer and organist.

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Francesco Cera

Francesco Cera (born in Bologna, Italy) is an Italian harpsichordist, organist and conductor.

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Francesco d'Avalos

Francesco d'Avalos (Naples, 11 April 1930 – Naples, 26 May 2014) was an Italian conductor and composer.

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Francesco Rasi

Francesco Rasi (14 May 1574 – 30 November 1621) was an Italian composer, singer (tenor), chitarrone player, and poet.

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Gesù Nuovo

Gesù Nuovo is the name of a church and a square in Naples, Italy.

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Gesualdo

Gesualdo may refer to.

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Gesualdo Six

The Gesualdo Six are a vocal sextet specialising in the performance of renaissance polyphony, directed by Owain Park.

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Gesualdo, Campania

Gesualdo is an Italian town in the region of Campania, province of Avellino, with about 3,800 inhabitants.

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Gesualdo: Death for Five Voices

Gesualdo: Death for Five Voices (German: Tod für fünf Stimmen) is a 1995 film by German director Werner Herzog filmed for ZDF television.

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Giovan Leonardo Primavera

Giovan Leonardo Primavera (c. 1540–1585) was an Italian Renaissance composer and poet.

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Giovanni Balducci

Giovanni Balducci, called Il Cosci after his maternal uncle, (c. 1560 — after 1630) was an Italian mannerist painter.

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Giovanni Battista Guarini

Giovanni Battista Guarini (10 December 1538 – 7 October 1612) was an Italian poet, dramatist, and diplomat.

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Giovanni de Macque

Giovanni de Macque (Giovanni de Maque, Jean de Macque) (1548/1550 – September 1614) was a Netherlandish composer of the late Renaissance and early Baroque, who spent almost his entire life in Italy.

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Giovanni Maria Trabaci

Giovanni Maria Trabaci (ca. 1575 – 31 December 1647) was an Italian composer and organist.

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Girolamo Frescobaldi

Girolamo Alessandro Frescobaldi (also Gerolamo, Girolimo, and Geronimo Alissandro; September, 15831 March 1643) was a musician from Ferrara, one of the most important composers of keyboard music in the late Renaissance and early Baroque periods.

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Giulia della Rovere

Giulia della Rovere (1531, Casteldurante – 4 April 1563, Ferrara) was an Italian noblewoman.

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Glenn Watkins

Glenn E. Watkins (born May 30, 1927), is the Earl V. Moore Professor (Emeritus) of Music History and Musicology at the University of Michigan and a specialist in the study of Renaissance and 20th-century music.

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Goldberg Variations

The Goldberg Variations, BWV 988, are a work written for harpsichord by Johann Sebastian Bach, consisting of an aria and a set of 30 variations.

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Gramophone Classical Music Awards

The Gramophone Classical Music Awards, launched in 1977, are one of the most significant honours bestowed on recordings in the classical record industry.

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Harry van der Kamp

Harry van der Kamp (born 1947 in) is a Dutch bass singer in opera and concert.

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Hilliard Ensemble

The Hilliard Ensemble was a British male vocal quartet originally devoted to the performance of early music.

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History of music

Music is found in every known culture, past and present, varying widely between times and places.

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Holy Week

Holy Week (Latin: Hebdomas Sancta or Hebdomas Maior, "Greater Week"; Greek: Ἁγία καὶ Μεγάλη Ἑβδομάς, Hagia kai Megale Hebdomas, "Holy and Great Week") in Christianity is the week just before Easter.

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House of Carafa

The House of Carafa is a noble Neapolitan family of Italian nobles, clergy, and men of arts, known from the 12th century.

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I Dream of Jeannie Cusamano

"I Dream of Jeannie Cusamano" is the 13th episode of the HBO original series The Sopranos and the finale of the show's first season.

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Igor Stravinsky

Igor Fyodorovich Stravinsky (ˈiɡərʲ ˈfʲɵdərəvʲɪtɕ strɐˈvʲinskʲɪj; 6 April 1971) was a Russian-born composer, pianist, and conductor.

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Il Perdono di Gesualdo

Il Perdono di Gesualdo (in English, The Pardon of Gesualdo) is an altarpiece created in 1609 by the Florentine painter Giovanni Balducci for a commission from the madrigal composer Carlo Gesualdo, Prince of Venosa, of the kingdom of Naples.

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Imogen Holst

Imogen Clare Holst (12 April 1907 – 9 March 1984) was a British composer, arranger, conductor, teacher and festival administrator.

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Inganno

"Inganno" (deception) is an Italian term for one of the two musical devices: an interrupted cadence, or a type of transposition used in 16th- and early 17th-century Italian music.

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Irpinia

Irpinia (Latin Hirpinia) is a district of the Apennine Mountains around Avellino, a town in Campania, South Italy, about 50 km east of Naples.

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Italian Renaissance

The Italian Renaissance (Rinascimento) was the earliest manifestation of the general European Renaissance, a period of great cultural change and achievement that began in Italy during the 14th century (Trecento) and lasted until the 17th century (Seicento), marking the transition between Medieval and Modern Europe.

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Italy

Italy (Italia), officially the Italian Republic (Repubblica Italiana), is a sovereign state in Europe.

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Jacobus Gallus

Jacobus Gallus Carniolus (a.k.a. Jacob(us) Handl, Jacob(us) Händl, Jacob(us) Gallus; Jakob Petelin Kranjski) (3 July 1550 – 18 July 1591) was a late-Renaissance composer of SloveneSkei/Pokorn, Grove online ethnicity.

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James Wood (musician)

James Wood (born in Barton-on-Sea, England is 27 May 1953) is a British conductor, composer of contemporary classical music and former percussionist.

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Jürg Baur

Jürg Baur (11 November 1918 – 31 January 2010) was a German composer of classical music.

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Joe Coleman (painter)

Joseph "Joe" Coleman Jr. (born November 22, 1955) is an American painter, illustrator and performance artist.

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Jonathan Biss

Jonathan Biss (born September 18, 1980) is an American pianist, teacher, and writer based in New York City.

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Kampen, Overijssel

Kampen is a city and municipality in the province of Overijssel, Netherlands.

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La Venexiana

La Venexiana (founded 1995) is an Italian early music ensemble founded and led by Claudio Cavina, an Italian countertenor and conductor.

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László Passuth

László Passuth (Budapest, Hungary July 15, 1900- Balatonfüred, Hungary June 19, 1979) was a prolific Hungarian author of historical novels and translator.

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Leçons de ténèbres

Leçons de ténèbres, literally translated lessons of darkness, is a genre of French baroque music which developed from the polyphonic lamentations settings for the tenebrae service of Renaissance composers such as Sermisy, Gesualdo, Tallis, and Tomás Luis de Victoria into virtuoso solo chamber music.

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Leçons de ténèbres (Couperin)

The Leçons de ténèbres pour le mercredi saint ("Tenebrae Readings for Holy Wednesday") are a series of three vocal pieces composed by François Couperin for the liturgies of Holy Week, 1714, at the Abbaye royale de Longchamp.

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Les Arts Florissants (ensemble)

Les Arts Florissants is a Baroque musical ensemble in residence at the Théâtre de Caen in Caen, France.

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List of Baroque composers

Composers of the Baroque era, ordered by date of birth.

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List of Catholic musicians

List of Catholic Church musicians is a list of people who perform or compose Catholic music, a branch of Christian music.

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List of classical music composers by era

This is a list of classical music composers by era.

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List of composers by name

This is a list of composers by name, alphabetically sorted by surname, then by other names.

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List of compositions by Carlo Gesualdo

This is a list of compositions by Carlo Gesualdo (1566–1613), the Prince of Venosa.

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List of historical opera characters

This is a list of historical figures who have been characters in opera or operetta.

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List of Italian composers

This is an alphabetical list of composers from Italy, whose notability is established by reliable sources in other Wikipedia articles.

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List of Italians

This is a list of Italians, who are identified with the Italian nation through residential, legal, historical, or cultural means, grouped by their area of notability.

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List of Monumentum pro Gesualdo casts

This is a list of casts of New York City Ballet co-founder and balletmaster George Balanchine's 1960 Monumentum pro Gesualdo, made to Igor Stravinsky's eponymous music composed in honor of the 400th birthday of Don Carlo Gesualdo and consisting of Stravinsky's orchestrations of Don Carlo's madrigals.

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List of music biographies in Rees's Cyclopaedia

The music articles in Rees's ''Cyclopaedia'' were written by Charles Burney (1726–1814), with additional material by John Farey, sr (1766–1826), and John Farey, Jr (1791–1851), and illustrated by 53 plates as well a numerous examples of music typset within the articles.

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List of people from Southern Italy

This is a list of notable southern Italians.

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List of people with major depressive disorder

This is a list of notable people who have, or have had, major depressive disorder.

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List of Renaissance composers

This is a list of composers active during the Renaissance period of European history.

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List of Renaissance figures

This is a list of notable people associated with the Renaissance.

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Lodovico Agostini

Lodovico Agostini (1534 – 20 September 1590) was an Italian composer, singer, priest, and scholar of the late Renaissance.

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Love's Sacrifice

Love's Sacrifice is a Caroline era stage play, a tragedy written by John Ford, and first published in 1633.

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Luca Francesconi

Luca Francesconi (born 17 March 1956 in Milan) is an Italian composer.

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Luca Marenzio

Luca Marenzio (also Marentio; October 18, 1553 or 1554 – August 22, 1599) was an Italian composer and singer of the late Renaissance.

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Luci mie traditrici

Luci mie traditrici (Oh My Betraying Eyes) is an opera in two acts by Salvatore Sciarrino, who also wrote the libretto.

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Luzzasco Luzzaschi

Luzzasco Luzzaschi (c. 1545 – 10 September 1607) was an Italian composer, organist, and teacher of the late Renaissance.

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Maddalena Casulana

Maddalena Casulana (c. 1544 – c. 1590) was an Italian composer, lutenist and singer of the late Renaissance.

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Madrigal

A madrigal is a secular vocal music composition of the Renaissance and early Baroque eras.

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Madrigale spirituale

A madrigale spirituale (Italian; pl. madrigali spirituali) is a madrigal, or madrigal-like piece of music, with a sacred rather than a secular text.

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March 8

No description.

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Michelangelo Rossi

Michelangelo Rossi (Michel Angelo del Violino) (ca. 1601/1602 – 1656) was an important Italian composer, violinist and organist of the Baroque era.

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Milva

Maria Ilva Biolcati, (born 17 July 1939), known as Milva, is an Italian singer, stage and film actress, and television personality.

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Modernism

Modernism is a philosophical movement that, along with cultural trends and changes, arose from wide-scale and far-reaching transformations in Western society during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

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Monumentum pro Gesualdo

Monumentum pro Gesualdo is a ballet by New York City Ballet co-founder and balletmaster George Balanchine to eponymous music by Igor Stravinsky composed in honor of the 400th birthday of composer Carlo Gesualdo and consisting of Stravinsky's orchestrations of Gesualdo's madrigals.

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Motet

In western music, a motet is a mainly vocal musical composition, of highly diverse form and style, from the late medieval era to the present.

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Mpiri

The vocal ensemble Mpiri is a Faroese choral ensemble based in Copenhagen.

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Music history of Italy

The modern state of Italy did not come into being until 1861, though the roots of music on the Italian Peninsula can be traced back to the music of Ancient Rome.

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Music of Basilicata

The music of Basilicata is sparse at the moment.

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Music of Campania

Music of Campania The capital city of the Campania region of Italy is Naples; there is a separate article dealing with the Music of Naples.

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Musica reservata

In music history, musica reservata (also musica secreta) is either a style or a performance practice in a cappella vocal music of the latter half of the 16th century, mainly in Italy and southern Germany, involving refinement, exclusivity, and intense emotional expression of sung text.

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National Book Award for Nonfiction

The National Book Award for Nonfiction is one of four annual National Book Awards, which are given by the National Book Foundation to recognize outstanding literary work by U.S. citizens.

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Nicola Vicentino

Nicola Vicentino (1511 – 1575 or 1576) was an Italian music theorist and composer of the Renaissance.

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Noël Akchoté

Noël Akchoté (born 7 December 1968) is a French guitarist mainly active in the free improvisation, classical, experimental and free jazz.

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O vos omnes

O vos omnes is a responsory, originally sung as part of Roman Catholic liturgies for Holy Week, and now often sung as a motet.

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October 16

No description.

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Oltremontani

Oltremontani ("those from over the Alps") were those of the Franco-Flemish School of composers who dominated the musical landscape of Northern Italy during the middle of the sixteenth Century.

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Orlanda Velez Isidro

Orlanda Velez Isidro (born 6 March 1972) is a Portuguese classically trained coloratura soprano.

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Orlande de Lassus

Orlande de Lassus (also Roland de Lassus, Orlando di Lasso, Orlandus Lassus, Orlande de Lattre or Roland de Lattre; 1532, possibly 1530 – 14 June 1594) was a Netherlandish or Franco-Flemish composer of the late Renaissance.

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Oxford Camerata

The Oxford Camerata is a chamber choir based in Oxford.

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Palazzo di Sangro

Palazzo di Sangro is a palace in Naples, near san Domenico Maggiore.

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Paolo Quagliati

Paolo Quagliati (c. 1555 – 16 November 1628) was an Italian composer of the early Baroque era and a member of the Roman School of composers.

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Passion (music)

In Christian music, a Passion is a setting of the Passion of Christ.

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Péter Eötvös

Péter Eötvös (Hungarian: Eötvös Péter:; born 2 January 1944) is a Hungarian composer, conductor and teacher.

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Perfect fourth

In classical music from Western culture, a fourth spans exactly four letter names (staff positions), while a perfect fourth (harmonic series) always involves the same interval, regardless of key (sharps and flats) between letters. A perfect fourth is the relationship between the third and fourth harmonics, sounding neither major nor minor, but consonant with an unstable quality (additive synthesis). In the key of C, the notes C and F constitute a perfect fourth relationship, as they're separated by four semitones (C, C#, D, D#, E, F). Up until the late 19th century, the perfect fourth was often called by its Greek name, diatessaron. A perfect fourth in just intonation corresponds to a pitch ratio of 4:3, or about 498 cents, while in equal temperament a perfect fourth is equal to five semitones, or 500 cents. The perfect fourth is a perfect interval like the unison, octave, and perfect fifth, and it is a sensory consonance. In common practice harmony, however, it is considered a stylistic dissonance in certain contexts, namely in two-voice textures and whenever it appears above the bass. If the bass note also happens to be the chord's root, the interval's upper note almost always temporarily displaces the third of any chord, and, in the terminology used in popular music, is then called a suspended fourth. Conventionally, adjacent strings of the double bass and of the bass guitar are a perfect fourth apart when unstopped, as are all pairs but one of adjacent guitar strings under standard guitar tuning. Sets of tom-tom drums are also commonly tuned in perfect fourths. The 4:3 just perfect fourth arises in the C major scale between G and C.

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Peter Warlock

Philip Arnold Heseltine (30 October 189417 December 1930), known by the pseudonym Peter Warlock, was a British composer and music critic.

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Pierre Boulez

Pierre Louis Joseph Boulez CBE (26 March 1925 – 5 January 2016) was a French composer, conductor, writer and founder of institutions.

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Pomponio Nenna

Pomponio Nenna (baptized 13 June 1556 – 25 July 1608) was a Neapolitan Italian composer of the Renaissance.

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Prince Carlos

Prince Carlos or Carlo may refer to.

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Private Passions

Private Passions is a weekly music discussion programme which has been running since 15 April 1995 on BBC Radio 3, presented by the composer Michael Berkeley.

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Psalm 51

Psalm 51 (Septuagint numbering: Psalm 50) is one of the Penitential Psalms.

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Raimondo di Sangro

Raimondo di Sangro, Prince of Sansevero (30 January 1710 – 22 March 1771) was an Italian nobleman, inventor, soldier, writer, scientist, alchemist and freemason best remembered for his reconstruction of the Chapel of Sansevero in Naples.

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Renaissance music

Renaissance music is vocal and instrumental music written and performed in Europe during the Renaissance era.

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Responsories for Holy Week

Responsories for Holy Week (Latin: Responsoria pro hebdomada sancta) are three sets of nine responsories, for Maundy Thursday, Good Friday and Holy Saturday respectively, the three days of the Holy Week preceding Easter Sunday.

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Responsory

A responsory or respond is a type of chant in western Christian liturgies.

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Rinaldo dall'Arpa

Rinaldo dall'Arpa (b. late 16th century – 2 August 1603) was an Italian composer, singer, and harpist.

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Robert Craft

Robert Lawson Craft (October 20, 1923 – November 10, 2015) was an American conductor and writer.

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Robert Fraser (writer)

Robert Fraser FRSL, is a British author and biographer.

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Rocco Rodio

Rocco Rodio (c. 1535 – after 1615) was an Italian Renaissance composer and theorist, best known for his sacred works and keyboard ricercares.

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Schauet doch und sehet, ob irgend ein Schmerz sei, BWV 46

Schauet doch und sehet, ob irgend ein Schmerz sei (Behold and see, if there be any sorrow),, is a church cantata by Johann Sebastian Bach.

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Scipione Dentice

Scipione Dentice (29 January 1560 – 21 April 1633) was a Neapolitan keyboard composer.

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Scipione Lacorcia

Scipione Lacorcia (fl. 1590–1620) was a Neapolitan composer of madrigals.

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Scipione Stella

Scipione Stella (1558 or 1559 – May 20, 1622) was a Neapolitan composer.

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Scott Glasgow

Scott Glasgow is a Hollywood-based musical composer.

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September 8

No description.

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Sigismondo d'India

Sigismondo d'India (c. 1582 – before 19 April 1629) was an Italian composer of the late Renaissance and early Baroque eras.

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Simone Molinaro

Simone Molinaro (c. 1565 – 1615) was a composer of the late Renaissance in Italy.

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Sinan Savaskan

Sinan Savaskan (born 11 August 1954) is a British composer of contemporary classical music.

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Singer Pur

Singer Pur is a German vocal sextet founded in 1991 by five former members of the Regensburger Domspatzen to sing jazz repertoire.

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St Peter's, Eastern Hill

St Peter's, Eastern Hill is the Anglican parish church of the City of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.

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Stefano Felis

Stefano de Maza GattoDinko Fabris,, Bari, Levante, 1993, pp.

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String Quartets (Ligeti)

The Hungarian composer György Ligeti published three string quartets throughout his life - 2 string quartets proper (1953-54, 1968), and a student piece from 1950 published towards the end of Ligeti's life.

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Tenebrae

Tenebrae (—Latin for "darkness") is a religious service of Western Christianity held during the three days preceding Easter, and characterized by gradual extinguishing of candles, and by a "strepitus" or "loud noise" taking place in total darkness near the end of the service.

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Tenebrae Responsoria (Gesualdo)

Responsoria et alia ad Officium Hebdomadae Sanctae spectantia is a musical work by Italian composer Carlo Gesualdo, published in 1611.

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The Doors of Perception

The Doors of Perception is a philosophical essay, released as a book, by Aldous Huxley.

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The righteous perishes

The righteous perishes are the words with which the 57th chapter of the Book of Isaiah starts.

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Threni (Stravinsky)

Threni: id est Lamentationes Jeremiae Prophetae, usually referred to simply as Threni, is a musical setting by Igor Stravinsky of verses from the Book of Lamentations in the Latin of the Vulgate, for solo singers, chorus and orchestra.

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Timeline of musical events

This page indexes the individual year in music pages.

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Timeline of trends in Italian music

Timeline for Music of Italy Dates for musical periods such as Baroque, Classical, Romantic, etc.

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Torquato Tasso

Torquato Tasso (11 March 1544 – 25 April 1595) was an Italian poet of the 16th century, best known for his poem Gerusalemme liberata (Jerusalem Delivered, 1581), in which he depicts a highly imaginative version of the combats between Christians and Muslims at the end of the First Crusade, during the Siege of Jerusalem.

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Tristan chord

The Tristan chord is a chord made up of the notes F, B, D, and G. More generally, it can be any chord that consists of these same intervals: augmented fourth, augmented sixth, and augmented ninth above a bass note.

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Tristis est anima mea (responsory)

Tristis est anima mea is the second responsory of the Tenebrae for Maundy Thursday.

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True Story (film)

True Story is a 2015 American mystery thriller film directed by Rupert Goold and written by Goold and David Kajganich.

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Venosa

Venosa (Lucano: Venòse) is a town and comune in the province of Potenza, in the southern Italian region of Basilicata, in the Vulture area.

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Venosa (disambiguation)

*Venosa is a town and comune in Italy.

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Vittorio Baldini

Vittorio Baldini (died 21 February 1618) was an Italian printer and engraver.

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William Lawes

William Lawes (April 160224 September 1645) was an English composer and musician.

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1565 in music

No description.

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1566

Year 1566 (MDLXVI) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

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1566 in music

No description.

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1590 in music

No description.

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1594 in music

No description.

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1595 in music

No description.

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1596 in music

No description.

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1603 in music

The year 1603 in music involved some significant events.

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1611 in music

The year 1611 in music involved some significant events.

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1613

No description.

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1613 in music

The year 1613 in music involved some significant events.

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59th Annual Grammy Awards

The 59th Annual Grammy Awards ceremony was held on February 12, 2017.

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Redirects here:

Don Carlo Gesualdo, Don Carlo, Principe Di Venosa Gesualdo, Gesualdo da Venosa.

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carlo_Gesualdo

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