Isaac Posch
show This article may be expanded with text translated from the corresponding article in German. (August 2011) Click [show] for important translation instructions. |
Isaac Posch (1591–1622) was an Austrian composer and organist.[1] He is chiefly known for his contribution to dance music[2] Musicalische Ehrenfreudt 1618, and Musicalische Tafelfreudt 1621.[3] Posch died in Ljubljana, Slovenia.
References[]
- ^ The Harvard biographical dictionary of music - Page 689 Don Michael Randel - 1996 - Paul Peuerl and Isaac Posch: Instrumental- und Vokalwerke. ed. Karl Geiringer.
- ^ The Cambridge history of seventeenth-century music - Page 519 Tim Carter, John Butt - 2005 Early examples by William Brade, Johannes Thesselius, Paul Peuerl, Johann Hermann Schein and Isaac Posch group dances in sequence, such as Thesselius's (1609) paduana-intrada-galliard, or Schein's (1617) padovana-gagliarda-courente- ..."
- ^ The Allemande and the Tanz - Page 132 Richard Hudson - 2009 "Isaac Posch's Musicalische Ehrenfreudt (Regensburg"
Categories:
- 1623 deaths
- Austrian classical composers
- Austrian organists
- Male organists
- Austrian Baroque composers
- Renaissance composers
- 17th-century classical composers
- Austrian male classical composers
- Austrian composer stubs