Bartłomiej Pękiel
Bartłomiej Pękiel (fl. from 1633; d. ca. 1670) was a notable Polish composer of classical music.[1]
Pękiel served the court in Warsaw from at least 1633. He was the assistant to Marco Scacchi when the latter was head of the Royal Chapel there, and later was Kapellmeister himself from 1649 to 1655. He then moved to Wawel Cathedral Chapel in Kraków, where he led the orchestra after the death of Franciszek Lilius in 1657.
Works
Choral
- Missa pulcherrima (CATB)
- Missa Paschalis (ATTB)
- Missa Brevis (ATTB)
- Missae senza le cerimonie (CATB + CATB)
- Missa concertata "La Lombardesca"
- Missa a 4 voci (ATTB)
- Patrem na rotuły (ATTB)
- Patrem rotulatum (ATTB)
- Ave Maria. Motet (ATTB)
- Nativitas tua. Motet (ATTB)
- O adoranda Trinitas. Motet (ATTB)
- Magnum nomen Domini. Motet (CATB)
- Resonet in Laudibus. Motet (CATB)
- Salvator orbis. Motet (CATB)
- Domine ne in furore. Motet, (ATTB)
- Quae est ista. Motet, (ATTB)
- O Salutaris Hostia, Motet, (ATTB)
- Sub Tuum Praesidium. Motet (ATTB)
Instrumental
- Dialogo Audite mortales The first Polish Oratorio (per 3 violi d'gamba, duo canti, duo alti, tenor, bassus con basso continuo)
- Trzy tańce polskie ("Three Polish Dances"): Uroczysty (Moderato) - Dostojny (Andante) - Wesoły (Allegro)
- Dulcis amor Jesu. vocal concert (per duo canti, altus, tenore, bassus con basso continuo)
Notable recordings
- Bartłomiej Pękiel, The Sixteen, COR16110, June 2013 ,
References
- ↑ Julie Anne Sadie Companion to Baroque Music - 1998 Page 184 "Pekiel, Bartlomiej (d c1670). Organist and leading Polish composer of his era who worked at the Warsaw court chapel - first as Marco Scacchi's assistant, then as his successor (1653) - and, from 1658, in Krakow as director of music at the .
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/27/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.