The Michael Praetorius reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
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Michael Praetorius

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Michael Praetorius (probably February 15, 1571 - February 15, 1621) was a German composer and writer on music.

He was born in Creuzburg and studied in Torgau, Frankfurt an der Oder and Zerbst. He was organist at the Marienkirche in Frankfurt before working at the court in Wolfenbüttel as organist and (from 1604) Kapellmeister. From 1613 to 1616 he worked at the Saxon court at Dresden, where he was exposed to the latest Italian music.

He was a tremendously prolific composer, his works showing the influence of contemporaries Samuel Scheidt and Heinrich Schütz. They include the nine volume Musae sioniae (1605-10), a collection of over a thousand chorale and song arrangements; many other words for the Lutheran church; and a collection of instrumental dances, Terpsichore, his only surviving secular work. His three volume treatise Syntagma musicum (1614-20) is a detailed text on contemporary musical practices and musical instruments, and is an important document in musicology, organology and the field of authentic performance.

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