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Eliot Bates's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 4 years, 1 month ago
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Anne Donlon deposited American Literature from 1820 to 1900: Print Cultures on MLA Commons 4 years, 1 month ago
Traditional college textbooks reprint literary works removed from the print cultures in which they appeared. But this class featured works of nineteenth-century American literature as they were originally published through a variety of databases such as the American Periodicals Series (APS; accessed through UCCS’s Kraemer Family Library) as well a…[Read more]
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EN 124, College Research, is the second of a two-semester course designed to refine reading, writing, speaking, and critical thinking skills, and to introduce students to the principles and methods of college-level academic writing and research. Writing assignments will be based on a combination of personal experience, analysis, and research.…[Read more]
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Karen Cook's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 4 years, 1 month ago
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Luís Henriques deposited Two mid-sixteenth-century Cecilian parody masses in the group
Renaissance / Early Modern Studies on Humanities Commons 4 years, 2 months agoMusical celebrations of the feast of St Cecilia were common in Europe since the fifteenth century and throughout the sixteenth century. Of the many composers who wrote music for this festivity we find four mid-sixteenth-century compositions by French composers. Two motets Cantantibus orgnis and Cecilia virgo gloriosa – by Pierre Certon which…[Read more]
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Luís Henriques deposited Two mid-sixteenth-century Cecilian parody masses on Humanities Commons 4 years, 2 months ago
Musical celebrations of the feast of St Cecilia were common in Europe since the fifteenth century and throughout the sixteenth century. Of the many composers who wrote music for this festivity we find four mid-sixteenth-century compositions by French composers. Two motets Cantantibus orgnis and Cecilia virgo gloriosa – by Pierre Certon which…[Read more]
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Luís Henriques deposited Francisco Garro: O magnum mysterium on Humanities Commons 4 years, 2 months ago
Edition of the motet “O magnum mysterium”, for six voices, by the Spanish composer Francisco Garro (c.1556-c.1623). Garro was active in Lisbon as master of the Portuguese Royal Chapel from 1592 to 1623, and this motet was published in one of his 1609 collection of masses, printed in Lisbon at the Pedro Craesbeeck workshop.
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Luís Henriques deposited A biographical note on the composer António de Oliveira on Humanities Commons 4 years, 2 months ago
António de Oliveira was a Portuguese composer active in the last decades of the sixteenth century. He was a pupil of Manuel Mendes at Évora and made his musical career in the church of São Julião in Lisbon moving afterwards to Rome, where he died. Like Manuel Mendes, his musical production is scarce. This brief post aims to summarize what is kno…[Read more]
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Luís Henriques deposited Francisco Soriano: Magnificat Primi Toni [odd verses] on Humanities Commons 4 years, 3 months ago
Edition of the “Magnificat Primi Toni”, for four voices, by the Italian composer Francesco Soriano (c.1548-1621). This work sets the polyphony for the odd verses of the canticle. It was published in Soriano’s collection “Passio D. N. Jesu Christi secundum quatuor evangelistas… Magnificat sexdecim…”, printed in Rome by Luca Antonio Soldi in 1619.
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Luís Henriques deposited Filipe de Magalhães: Magnificat Sexti Toni [odd verses] on Humanities Commons 4 years, 3 months ago
Edition of the “Magnificat Sexti Toni”, for four voices, by the Portuguese composer Filipe de Magalhães (c.1571-1652). This work sets the polyphony for the odd verses of the canticle. It was published in Magalhães’s “Cantica Beatissimae Virginis”, printed in Lisbon at the Craesbeeck workshop in 1636.
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Luís Henriques's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 4 years, 3 months ago
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Luís Henriques deposited Francisco José Perdigão: Motets for Advent in the group
Music in Évora studies on Humanities Commons 4 years, 3 months agoEdition of the motets for Advent for four voices by the Portuguese composer Francisco José Perdigão (17??-1833) preserved in the Códice n.º 10 of Évora Cathedral music archive. Comprises the motet “Amen dico vobis” for the First Sunday, “Cum audisset Joannes for the Second Sunday, and “Omnis vallis implebitur” for the Fourth Sunday.
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