Proyecto Música

  • 150 BCE

    Seikilos Epitaph

    Seikilos Epitaph
    It is an Ancient Greek inscription that preserves the oldest surviving complete musical composition, including musical notation.
  • Jan 1, 900

    Gregorian Chant

    Gregorian Chant
    It is a monodic chant, written in latin and sung a capella. It's purpose was to teach the faithful the word of God.
  • Sep 21, 991

    Guido d'Arezzo

    Guido d'Arezzo
    He was a monk who lived in the late first century and created the musical notation system we still use nowadays, taking the first syllable from each verse of an hymn dedicated to St John the Baptist.
  • Sep 16, 1098

    Hildegard von Bingen

    Hildegard von Bingen
    Hildegard von Bingen was a German Benedictine abbess, mystic, composer, and writer, known for her visionary works and sacred music. Hildegard is celebrated as one of the earliest known female composers and a significant figure in medieval theology and medicine.
  • Feb 7, 1135

    Bernart de Ventadorn

    Bernart de Ventadorn
    Bernart de Ventadorn, also known as Bernart de Ventadour and Bernard de Ventadorn, was a popular Provençal troubadour, composer and poet. He is probably the best known troubadour of the style called trobar leu.
  • Dec 23, 1138

    Leonin

    Leonin
    Léonin was a 12th-century French composer and the earliest known member of the Notre Dame School of polyphony. He influenced many other composer that came after, such as Perotin.
  • Period: Jan 1, 1170 to Jan 5, 1310

    Ars Antiqua

    It was the first type of poliphonic music. It refers to sacred or polyphonic music, excluding the secular monophonic songs of the troubadours.
  • Nov 23, 1220

    Alfonso X el Sabio

    Alfonso X el Sabio
    Spanish king and cultural patron, known for promoting science, poetry, and the Cantigas de Santa María.
  • May 7, 1260

    Perotin

    Perotin
    Perotin was a very influential composer during the Ars Nova. He was part of the Notre Dame school and he is known for expanding the complexity of vocal music by introducing four-part polyphony.
  • Mar 4, 1300

    Guillaume de Machaut

    Guillaume de Machaut
    French composer and poet, very important for the Ars Nova because of his polyphonic and lyrical works.
  • Period: Jan 1, 1320 to Jan 1, 1370

    Ars Nova

    Ars Nova was a 14th-century musical style known for its rhythmic complexity and polyphony, marking a shift from simpler medieval music. It allowed for greater expression in both sacred and secular compositions, led by composers like Philippe de Vitry and Francesco Landini.
  • Mar 6, 1335

    Francesco Landini

    Francesco Landini
    Francesco Landini or Landino was an Italian composer, organist, singer, poet, instrument maker and astrologer. He was the most famous composer in Italy.
  • Apr 3, 1400

    Johannes Gutenberg

    Johannes Gutenberg
    German inventor, who created the printing press which allowed a greater diffusion of music.
  • Jun 12, 1448

    Juan del Encina

    Juan del Encina
    Spanish poet, dramatist, and composer, recognized as a pioneer of Spanish secular drama and music.
  • Nov 10, 1483

    Martin Luther

    Martin Luther
    German theologian and reformer who was the main promoter of the Protestant Reformation.
  • 1500

    Cristóbal de Morales

    Cristóbal de Morales
    He was one of the three most important composers during Rennaissance in Spain. He was known for his sacred music.
  • Mar 30, 1510

    Antonio de Cabezón

    Antonio de Cabezón
    Spanish Renaissance composer and organist, famous for his intricate keyboard music and polyphonic works.
  • 1525

    Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina

    Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina
    Palestrina was an italian composer of sacred music, considered a master of polyphony and a model for Renaissance church music.
  • 1531

    Orlando di Lasso

    Orlando di Lasso
    He was a Franco-Flemish composer of sacred and secular music, admired for his versatility and expressive vocal style.
  • 1533

    Andrea Gabrieli

    Andrea Gabrieli
    Organist and composer from the late Rennissance, important for his innovative polychoral works and contributions to the Venetian style. Uncle of Giovanni Gabrielli.
  • 1544

    Maddalena Casulana

    Maddalena Casulana
    She was an Italian composer and singer, the first woman in Europe to publish her musical works in print.
  • 1548

    Tomás Luis de Victoria

    Tomás Luis de Victoria
    Tomás Luis de Victoria was a Catholic priest, chapel master and famous polyphonic composer of the Spanish Renaissance. He has been considered one of the most relevant and advanced composers of his time, with his innovative style.
  • 1557

    Giovanni Gabrieli

    Giovanni Gabrieli
    Italian composer, famous for his grand sacred and instrumental music for the Basilica of San Marco in Venice.
  • Mar 30, 1565

    Carlo Gesualdo

    Carlo Gesualdo
    Carlo Gesualdo, Prince of Venosa and Count of Conza, was an Italian composer, one of the most significant figures of late Renaissance music with expressive madrigals and pieces of sacred music.
  • May 15, 1567

    Claudio Monteverdi

    Claudio Monteverdi
    Italian composer, very important in the transition from Renaissance to Baroque
    Born: May 15, 1567.
  • Giacomo Carissimi

    Giacomo Carissimi
    He was a composer, pioneer of oratorio music and influential in vocal composition.
  • Barbara Strozzi

    Barbara Strozzi
    Italian Baroque composer and singer, known for her highly expressive cantatas and arias.
    Born: August 6, 1619.
  • Stradivarius

    Stradivarius
    Antonio Stradivari was an Italian luthier, world-renowned for crafting the finest violins, violas, and cellos.
    Born: c. 1644.
  • Henry Purcell

    Henry Purcell
    English composer of the Baroque, famous for his dramatic operas and beautiful sacred music.
    Born: September 10, 1659.
  • Antonio Vivaldi

    Antonio Vivaldi
    Composer and violinist born in Italy, best known for his concertos, especially The Four Seasons.
  • George Philipp Telemann

    George Philipp Telemann
    German composer, one of the most prolific Baroque musicians, great in both vocal and instrumental genres.
  • Georg Friedrich Händel

    Georg Friedrich Händel
    German-British composer, celebrated for his operas, oratorios and instrumental works.
  • Johann Sebastian Bach

    Johann Sebastian Bach
    German Baroque composer, known for his mastery of counterpoint, harmony, and church music.
  • Creación del cachopo

    Creación del cachopo
  • España campeona Mundial de Baloncesto

    España campeona Mundial de Baloncesto
  • Retirada Rudy Fernández

    Retirada Rudy Fernández