- Vicente Lusitano
Vicente Lusitano (died after
1561 ) was a Portuguesemusic composer and theorist of the late Renaissance.He was born in
Olivença , but little else is known for certain of his life, including the dates of his birth and death. Some information is recorded in the 18th century biography byBarbosa Machado : he came from Olivença, became a priest, and was employed as a teacher both atPadua andViterbo . Machado also called him a "mestizo ". Very little of what Machado wrote about him has been verified by any other source, except the date of publication (1561) of a music theory treatise atVenice .As a composer he wrote a number of choral works, including
motet s and a madrigal, but he is better known by far for his work as a theorist. In a1551 debate in Rome, he espoused traditional views on the role of the three genera in music (diatonic , chromatic andenharmonic ) over more radical ones put forward byNicola Vicentino (Lusitano was deemed to have won the debate). His "Introdutione facilissima et novissima de canto ferma" (Rome ,1553 , and again at Venice, 1561), contains an introduction to music, a section on improvisedcounterpoint , and his views on the three genera.References
* Bonnie Blackburn: "Vicente Lusitano", Grove Music Online, ed. L. Macy (Accessed January 6, 2006), [http://www.grovemusic.com (subscription access)]
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