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Cristóbal de Morales
Born: 1500; Seville, Spain   Died: September, 1553; Marchena, Spain  
Though his masses and motets brought him international fame, and Morales is today regarded as the most important Spanish ecclesiastical composer of the Renaissance, his career is well documented through his employment as a singer -- including a decade in the papal choir -- and maestro de capella of several prominent cathedrals. If there is hardly a single anecdote to lend personal color to a life spent in such exalted occupation, several things ...
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Featured Cristóbal de Morales CDs & DVDs:
Morales: Mass For The Feast Of St Isidore Of Seville
Release Date: 04/08/2003   Label: Archiv Produktion (Dg)   Catalog: 474228   Number of Discs: 1
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Works
Ad tante Nativitatis (1)
Andreas Christi famulus (1)
Antequam comedam suspiro (1)
Asperges me domine à 5 (1)
Ave Maria, gratia plena (1)
Ave maris stella (1)
Ave maris stella: Monstra te esse matrem (1)
Beati omnes (1)
Beati omnes qui timent Dominum (1)
Candidiores Nazarei ejus nive (2)
Circumdederunt (4)
Clamabat autem mulier Chananea (1)
De Antequera sale el moro (1)
Ecce sic benedicetur (2)
Ecce virgo concipiet (1)
Emendemus in melius (2)
Et factum est, postquam (1)
Et incarnatus est (1)
Exaltata est sancta Dei genitrix (1)
Felix per omnes festum mundi cardines (1)
Gaude et laetare ferrariensis civitas (1)
Gloria laus et honor tibi sit (1)
Jam Christus astra ascenderat (1)
Jubilate Deo omnis terra (5)
Jubilate Deo Omnis Terra, for 6 voices (1)
Justi confitebuntur...Eripe me Domine (1)
Lachrimosa dies illa, motet (1)
Lamentabatur Jacob (4)
Lamentations for Good Friday: Vocavi amicos meos (1)
Lumen ad revelationem gentium...Nunc dimittis (1)
Magnificat octavi toni (1)
Magnificat primi toni (1)
Magnificat(s) (1)
Misa Mille regretz: Kyrie (1)
Missa "Ave Maria": Agnus dei (1)
Missa "Ave Maria": Gloria (1)
Missa "Ave Maria": Kyrie (1)
Missa "Ave Maria": Sanctus (1)
Missa "L'homme arme" (1)
Missa "Mille regretz" (1)
Missa "Mille regretz": Agnus Dei (4)
Missa "Mille regretz": Credo (1)
Missa "Mille regretz": Gloria (1)
Missa "Mille regretz": Kyrie (2)
Missa "Mille regretz": Sanctus (5)
Missa "Queramus cum pastoribus" (1)
Missa "Si bona suscepimus" (1)
Missa de beata virgine (2)
Missa pro defunctis à 5 (1)
Missa pro defunctis: Benedictus (1)
Missus est Gabriel (1)
Ne Recorderis (1)
Nova resultent gaudia (1)
O crux, ave, spes unica (1)
O sacrum convivium (6)
Officium Defunctorum: Ad matutinum. Circumdederunt me gemitus mortis (1)
Officium defunctorum: In primo nocturno (1)
Officium Defunctorum: In primo nocturno. Lectio 2 (Job 10, 1-7): Taedet animam meam vitae (1)
Officium Defunctorum: In primo nocturno. Lectio 3 (Job 10, 8-12): Manus tuas (1)
Officium Defunctorum: In primo nocturno. Versiculum: A porta infieri. Lectio 1 (Job 7, 16-21): Parce (1)
Officium defunctorum: In secundo nocturno (1)
Officium Defunctorum: In secundo nocturno. Versiculum: Collocet eos cum principibus. Responsorum: Ne (1)
Officium Defunctorum: Invitatorium. Regum cui omnia vivunt. Psalmus 94: Venite, exultemus Domino (1)
Officium defunctorum: Ne recorderis (1)
Officium defunctorum: Regem cui (1)
Officium defunctorum: Taedet animam meam vitae (1)
Parce mihi (1)
Parce mihi domine (5)
Pastores, dicite, quidnam (2)
Pater noster (4)
Puer natus est nobis (1)
Qui consolabatur me (1)
Regem cui (1)
Regina caeli, laetare (3)
Requiem (2)
Sacris solemniis iuncta sint (1)
Salve regina (1)
Salve Regina, for 4 voices (1)
Sancta et immaculata virginitas (2)
Sancta Maria, succurre miseris (2)
Sanctus (1)
Si no's huviera mirado (2)
Spem in alium nunquam habui (1)
Urbs beata Jerusalem (1)
Veni Domine (1)
Veni redemptor gentium (1)
Vidi aquam egredientem (1)
Vigilavit jugum iniquitatum mearum (1)
Virgo Maria (1)
More Featured Cristóbal de Morales CDs & DVDs:
P. De Manchicourt, C. De Morales, Etc / Nordic Voices
Release Date: 08/28/2007   Label: Chandos   Catalog: 5050   Number of Discs: 1
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Cristobal De Morales: Missa Mille Regretz, Etc / Chanticleer
Release Date: 10/04/1993   Label: Chanticleer Records   Catalog: 8809   Number of Discs: 1
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Biography by Adrian Corleonis
Though his masses and motets brought him international fame, and Morales is today regarded as the most important Spanish ecclesiastical composer of the Renaissance, his career is well documented through his employment as a singer -- including a decade in the papal choir -- and maestro de capella of several prominent cathedrals. If there is hardly a single anecdote to lend personal color to a life spent in such exalted occupation, several things may be inferred. Foremost, there is pride in having been born in Seville, one of the great European cultural centers; pride in getting a thorough education (though there is no record of university study) for Morales claims to have mastered the Trivium and Quadrivium of the medieval curriculum; pride in his mastery of Classical -- rather than ecclesiastical -- Latin; and pride in his fluent technique -- likely learned from Francisco de Peñalosa and Pedro de Escobar -- which he turned to a contrapuntally elaborate, polyphonically rich, and suavely elevated utterance -- anticipating (perhaps influencing) and rivaling that of Palestrina -- in his 21 masses, more than 100 motets, and two sets of Magnificats. Clearly, Morales was omnicompetent and ambitious. He became maestro de capella at the Avila cathedral in 1526, moving on to Plasencia (at nearly double the salary) in 1528. Apparently, he was well regarded: in 1530 he was granted a month's leave to attend his sister's wedding and a substantial amount toward her dowry. Overstaying his visit, his salary was temporarily suspended and he resigned in December 1531. He next appears in the papal choir in Rome in September 1535, a post he held for the next decade, singing beside Arcadelt and Festa in the Sistine Chapel (whose frescos Michelangelo had completed in 1512) and before the crowned heads of Europe as part of the pope's retinue. His tenure was marked by increasing stints of illness. In 1544 two lavishly printed volumes of masses announced Morales' genius and his availability. Despite generous salary and vacations, he sought more remunerative employment, and when the pope conferred favors on less distinguished members of the choir, he resigned, leaving Rome in 1545 to return to Seville, where he taught Francisco Guerrero. In that year he became maestro of the primatical cathedral in Toledo, where he again fell ill, renouncing his post on August 9, 1547. He served as maestro to the Duke of Arcos at Marchena from 1548 to 1551. An unhappy term as maestro at Málaga Cathedral ended with Morales' death in the fall of 1553.
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