Composers

Diego Ortiz

Viol
Voice
Soprano
Alto
Tenor
Bass
Ricercar
Religious music
Passamezzo
Dance
Chanson
Song
Arias
Psalms
Sacred hymns
Hymn
by popularity

A

Aria d'un sonetto

D

Dixit Dominus

J

Jánitor Caeli

R

Recercada ottava sobre tenores italianosRecercada prima sobre 'O Felici Occhi Miei'Recercada primeraRecercada primera sobre 'Doulce Memoire'Recercada primera sobre 'La Spagna'Recercada primera sobre tenores italianosRecercada quartaRecercada quarta sobre 'Doulce Memoire'Recercada quarta sobre 'La Spagna'Recercada quarta sobre 'O Felici Occhi Miei'Recercada quarta sobre tenores ItalianosRecercada quinta pars sobre tenores ItalianosRecercada quinta sobre 'La Spagna'Recercada quinta sobre tenores ItalianosRecercada segundaRecercada segunda sobre 'Doulce Memoire'Recercada segunda sobre 'La Spagna'Recercada segunda sobre 'O Felici Occhi Miei'Recercada segunda sobre tenores ItalianosRecercada sesta sobre 'La Spagna'Recercada sesta sobre tenores ItalianosRecercada settima sobre tenores ItalianosRecercada terceraRecercada tercera sobre 'Doulce Memoire'Recercada tercera sobre 'La Spagna'Recercada tercera sobre 'O Felici Occhi Miei'Recercada tercera sobre tenores Italianos

T

Trattado de Glosas
Wikipedia
Diego Ortiz (c. 1510 – c. 1576) was a Spanish composer and music theorist in service to the viceroy of Naples ruled by the spanish monarchs Charles V and Philip II. Ortiz published the first manual on ornamentation for bowed string instruments, and a large collection of sacred vocal compositions (Stevenson 2001).
Very little is known about Ortiz's life. He is believed to have been born in Toledo and probably died in Rome, where its trail is lost.
In 1553 Ortiz was living in the viceroyalty of Naples. Five years later, the third duke of Alba, Fernando Álvarez de Toledo, appointed him maestro di cappella of the Chapel Royal of Naples. In 1565 Ortiz still held the post under the Viceroy Pedro Afán de Ribera, duke of Alcalá. A recent study (Lafarga, Cháfer, Navalón, and Alejano 2017, 41–59) suggests that Diego Ortiz could have been the model for a very relevant personage in the famous work of Paolo Caliari Veronese "The Wedding at Cana", based on the instrumental ensemble represented by the painter, the edition date of Ortiz's second book Musices liber primus in Venice, the repeated confusions (Hagen and Hagen 2001, 157) and misattributions (Lafarga, Cháfer, Navalón, and Alejano 2017, ch. 6, table I) about this person in the literature down to the present, and the striking resemblance of the painted character with the only known engraved portrait of the musician.
Recent findings reveal that, after his service to the Spanish Neapolitan Court, as Maestro di Cappella appeared, as "famigliare", in the Colonna's Court in Rome, at least from April 1572 to September 1576 (Morucci 2018, 22, 37n18).
Ortiz published two music books: Trattado de Glosas in 1553 and Musices liber primus in 1565.
The Trattado de Glosas (modern Spanish spelling Tratado de Glosas) is considered a masterpiece of literature for the viola da gamba. The work was published on 10 December 1553, in Rome under the Spanish title Trattado de glossas sobre clausulas y otros generos de puntos en la musica de violones nuevamente puestos en luz. The Italian edition was published at the same time, with the title Glose sopra le cadenze et altre sorte de punti in la musica del violone. The Italian edition is full of Hispanicisms, which suggests that Ortiz made this version himself (Stevenson 2001).
Ortiz published a collection of polyphonic religious music in 1565 in Venice. Musices liber primus hymnos, Magnificas, Salves, motecta, psalmos includes sixty-nine compositions for four to seven voices, based on plainchant works. They are stylistically conservative for the period, appropriate to the tastes of the dedicatee, Ortiz's employer, Pedro Afán de Rivera, Duke of Alcalá and the Spanish Viceroy in Naples. In the preface to this publication, Ortiz encourages performers to accompany these sacred polyphonic works with instruments, a practice favoured at the time in Spain, and promises future publication of a book of masses which never appeared (Stevenson 2001).