
- EDITOR’S CHOICE
- 2011 · Vox Luminis, Lionel Meunier
Composer · 1585 - 1672
Heinrich Schütz
Live Albums
- Tolzer Boys Choir, soloists, Max Engel, Jörg Zwicker, Christian Brembeck, Roman Summereder, Christoph Engel, Andreas Ludescher, Lucia Sulz, Gerhard Schmidt-Gaden, Ulli Engel, Brigitte Haas
Singles & EPs
- Johanna Falkinger, Wuppertaler Kurrende, Lautten Compagney, Lukas Baumann
- University of Maryland Women’s Chorus, Kenneth Elpus
- Saltzburg Mozateum Chorus, Stuttgart Choral Society, Saltzburg Mozateum Orchestra
- Janina Fialkowska, Francis Colpron, Daniel Kobyliansky, Julie-Anne Derome, Esteban La Rotta, Yoav Talmi, Forestare, Concerto Palatino, Stephen Stubbs, Orchestre Métropolitain, Orchestre symphonique de Québec, Quatuor Franz Joseph, Thomas Rösner, Maxine Eilander, Theatre of Early Music, Yves-G. Préfontaine, Jivko Georgiev, Orchestre Symphonique Bienne, Les Voix Baroques, Studio de musique ancienne de Montréal, Yannick Nézet-Séguin, Denis Plante, Christopher Jackson, Les Boréades de Montréal, Margaret Little, David Jacques
Biography
Heinrich Schütz (1585-1672) was a German composer whose long career extended from the late Renaissance well into the Baroque era. A composer of a large body of vocal and choral music, Schütz was a major influence on the development of J.S. Bach, and his mixing of Giovanni Gabrieli's polychoral style and Protestant church music yielded works of a highly dramatic nature. He traveled widely and served at many courts across Europe. Schütz composed and published several collections of his sacred music, including the Psalmen Davids and the Symphoniae sacrae, though many of his pieces went unpublished and are presumed lost.