Diogo Dias Melgás: Difference between revisions
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==List of choral works== | ==List of choral works== | ||
{{Legend}} | {{Legend}} | ||
*[[Cum facis eleemosynam (Diogo Dias | *[[Cum facis eleemosynam (Diogo Dias Melgás)|''Cum facis eleemosynam'']] ( {{broken}}[http://partituras.no.sapo.pt/partituras/c.htm {{net}}] ) | ||
*''[[Salve Regina (Diogo Dias Melgás)|Salve Regina]]'' ( [{{SERVER}}/wiki/images/1/1c/Melg%C3%A1s%2C_Diogo_D._-_Salve_Regina.pdf {{pdf}}] [{{SERVER}}/wiki/images/7/74/Dias_Salve.mid {{mid}}] ) | *''[[Salve Regina (Diogo Dias Melgás)|Salve Regina]]'' ( [{{SERVER}}/wiki/images/1/1c/Melg%C3%A1s%2C_Diogo_D._-_Salve_Regina.pdf {{pdf}}] [{{SERVER}}/wiki/images/7/74/Dias_Salve.mid {{mid}}] ) | ||
Revision as of 20:57, 21 February 2011
Aliases: Melgaz
Life
Born: 14 April 1638, Cuba, Portugal
Died: 3 February 1700, Évora
Biography
Diogo Dias Melgás was a Portuguese composer of polyphony. He was a choirboy at the Colégio da Claustra in Évora in 1546. He took the holy orders at the Cathedral of Évora, where he stayed the rest of his life, being a student of Manuel Rebelo, and holding the position of mestre de capela for about 30 years. He died blind and extremely poor on 3 February 1600. He was the last of the great Portuguese polyphony masters who began to flourish in Évora in the second half of the 16th century.
- The above is an excerpt from Wikipedia. For the full article, click here.
List of choral works
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- Cum facis eleemosynam ( )
- Salve Regina ( )
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Publications
External links
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