Agricola, Alexander

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Agricola, Alexander

Agricola, Alexander, Franco-Netherlands composer; b. Flanders, c. 1446; d. Valladolid, late Aug. 1506. He entered the service of the Duke of Milan in 1471. In 1474 he went to Cambrai, where he is mentioned as petit vicaire at the Cathedral in 1476. After serving the French royal chapel, he was a singer at the Florence Cathedral in 1491–92 before serving again at the French royal chapel in 1492–93. In 1500 he entered the service of Philip I the Handsome in Burgundy, and followed his patron to Spain in 1501, where he remained until 1503. In 1506 he returned to Spain. His extensive output includes masses and mass movements, hymns, Lamentations, Magnificat settings, motets, and many secular vocal works. See E. Lerner, ed., A. A.: Opera omnia, Corpus Mensurabilis Musicae, XXII/1–5 (1961–70).

Bibliography

E. Lerner, The Sacred Music of A. A. (diss., Yale Univ., 1958).

—Nicolas Slonimsky/Laura Kuhn/Dennis McIntire

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Agricola, Alexander

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