Oct. 10, 1938 – Oct. 6, 2006 A funeral for Heinrich “Henry” Schuetz, 67, of Vacaville will be held at 12:30 p.m., Monday at Vaca Hills Chapel Funeral Home, 524 Elmira Road, Vacaville. Burial with ...
The Book of Psalms exhorts us frequently to use our instruments and voices in praise of the Lord, and few composers have taken this injunction to heart as thoroughly as Heinrich Schütz, the 17th ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Listen to the music of Heinrich Schütz, a 17th century pathbreaker whose work is largely unknown today. By Anthony Tommasini The professor who taught ...
Heinrich Schütz was presumably the first internationally renowned German composer. In the 40 years he spent as court "kapellmeister" in Dresden, he left a strong impression on musical life in Europe.
Kirsten Gibson surveys recordings of music by the 17th-century German composer Heinrich Schütz and recommends a starter collection, while Jeremy Sams reviews a big box of Saint-Saëns. Henrich Schütz ...
Donald Macleod journeys through Christmas week in the company of Heinrich Schütz. Donald begins by dipping a toe into the fertile archival territory of Schütz’s own writings, a fascinating window onto ...
Heinrich Schuetz Chor, Tokyo, will give a rare performance of 17th-century German Protestant music on Sept. 19 at Tokyo Cathedral (Maria Daiseido) in Sekiguchi, Bunkyo Ward, to mark the 40th ...
Schütz was the greatest German composer of the 17th century and the first of international stature. In 1598 Schütz was taken to Kassel, where he served as a choirboy and studied music with the court ...
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