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・ Missa Pange lingua
・ Missa Papae Marcelli
・ Missa pro defunctis (Brumel)
・ Missa Pro Populo
・ Missa prolationum
・ Missa Salisburgensis à 53 voci
・ Missa Sancti Bernardi von Offida
・ Missa Sancti Nicolai
・ Missa Sanctissimae Trinitatis
・ Missa Sicca
・ Missa sine nomine
・ Missa sine nomine (Josquin)
・ Missa solemnis
・ Missa solemnis (Beethoven)
・ Missa solemnis (Bruckner)
Missa sopra Ecco sì beato giorno
・ Missa Tempore Quadragesimae (Michael Haydn)
・ Missa Votiva
・ Missael Espinoza
・ Missaglia
・ Missaglia (surname)
・ Missaguash River
・ Missak Manouchian
・ Missal
・ Missal of Arbuthnott
・ Missal of Silos
・ Missal, Paraná
・ Missale Aboense
・ Missale Romanum Glagolitice
・ Missamana


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Missa sopra Ecco sì beato giorno : ウィキペディア英語版
Missa sopra Ecco sì beato giorno
The ''Missa sopra Ecco sì beato giorno'' is a musical setting of the Ordinary of the Mass, for 40 and 60 voices, by Florentine Renaissance composer Alessandro Striggio. It probably dates from 1565–6, during the reign of his employer Cosimo I de' Medici. Lost for more than 400 years, it was recently rediscovered in Paris. Most of the mass is for five separate choirs of 8 voices each, with the closing Agnus Dei being for five separate choirs of 12 voices each; all of the voice parts are fully independent. With its huge polychoral forces, climaxing on sixty fully independent parts, it is the largest known polyphonic composition from the entire era.
==Background==

The court of the Medici was long known for its patronage of the arts, including music, and the Medici rulers, from Lorenzo the Magnificent to Cosimo I de' Medici, were particularly noted for their love of music. Keenly aware that their status depended on not only employing the most talented artists and musicians, but having them create spectacular works and having them disseminated, they encouraged composers to write music which exceeded that of their contemporaries in size and scope.〔Moroney, pp. 4-5〕 During the 1530s and 1540s, Francesco Corteccia, who was the principal composer for the first part of Cosimo's reign, wrote series of elaborate intermedii—groups of madrigals designed to be performed between the acts of plays, sung by actors in costume and accompanied by instruments. This musical form was one of the predecessors of opera.〔Nutter, Grove online〕
In the realm of sacred music, the desire of the Medici for opulence was no less. Instead of decorating plays with madrigals interspersed between the acts, however, the Medici's court composer – who was Striggio by the 1560s – chose to create works for larger groups of voices than had been attempted before, and to accompany these already massive vocal forces with instruments.〔Fenlon, Grove online〕 His first attempt was apparently the ''Missa sopra Ecco sì beato giorno'', and some time later he followed this with a 40-voice motet setting, ''Ecce beatam lucem'', a piece which has long been known. Some other gigantic polychoral works from the same time include Thomas Tallis's famous and often-performed ''Spem in alium nunquam habui'', for 40 voices, which may have been a response to hearing either the motet or the Mass in 1567; Stefano Rossetto's 50-voice motet ''Consolamini popule meus''; and Cristofano Malvezzi's 30-voice intermedio for another Medici marriage, ''O fortunato giorno''. Both Rossetto and Malvezzi were associated with the Medici court. Preceding these works was a 40-voice motet produced in Munich in 1564 by Orlande de Lassus, which has been lost.〔Moroney, p. 53〕
When Striggio completed the enormous mass setting, he carried it with him during a diplomatic trip across Europe to strengthen the dynastic relation brought on by the recent marriage of Francesco de' Medici to Johanna of Austria, who was a Habsburg. His trip consisted of a series of visits to new Medici in-laws, including Maximilian II, the Holy Roman Emperor. It was necessary to give them something splendid, and this was likely a performance of the colossal 40 and 60 voice mass, along with a copy for their archives. Leaving Florence in December 1566, he visited Mantua, and then made the difficult winter trek over the Brenner Pass, visiting Vienna, Brno, Munich, and Paris. In June 1567 he made his way to London with the specific purpose of meeting "the virtuosos in the profession of music that were there" (as he wrote in a letter to Francesco I de' Medici, dated 18 May 1567). While in England, he almost certainly met Thomas Tallis, and it is now considered likely that the ''Missa sopra Ecco sì beato giorno'' was performed in a private residence – likely the London seat of the Earl of Arundel, Arundel House – in order not to offend the authorities (since performance of the Roman Catholic Mass was at that time prohibited in Protestant England).〔Moroney, pp. 17–19, p. 30-33〕

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