1628 in music
The year 1628 in music involved some significant events.
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Events
    
- July 10 – Heinrich Schütz seeks a travel warrant from Johann Georg, Elector of Saxony, to return to Venice to visit Monteverdi and Alessandro Grandi.[1]
 - November 22 – Girolamo Frescobaldi is given permission by St Peter's Basilica to leave Rome.
 
Published popular music
    
- Carlo Farina
- Il quarto libro delle pavane, gagliarde, balletti, volte, passamezi, sonate, canzon
 - Fünffter Theil newer Pavanen, Brand: Mascharaden, Balletten, Sonaten
 
 - Melchior Franck
- Rosetulum musicum for four, five, six, seven, and eight voices with basso continuo (Coburg: Johann Forckel for Friedrich Gruner)
 - Sacri Convivii Musica Sacra for four, five, and six voices (Coburg: Johann Forckel), a collection of motets
 - Zwey Neue Musicalische Concert for three choirs (Coburg: Kaspar Bertsch), two wedding motets
 - Suspirium Germaniae Publicum for four and seven voices (Coburg: Johann Forckel), two motets
 
 - Vinko Jelić
- Arion primus sacrorum concentuum for one, two, three, and four voices with organ bass, Op. 2 (Strasbourg: Paul Lederz)
 - Arion secundus psalmorum vespertinorum for four voices with organ bass, Op. 3 (Strasbourg: Paul Lederz)
 
 - Giovanni Girolamo Kapsberger – Cantiones sacrae, vol. 1 (Rome: Paolo Masotti)
 - Carlo Milanuzzi – Sixth book of ariose vaghezze for solo voice with accompaniment, Op. 15 (Venice: Alessandro Vincenti)
 - Peter Philips – Paradisus sacris cantionibus consitus for one, two, and three voices with organ bass (Antwerp: Pierre Phalèse)
 
Opera
    
- Francesca Caccini – La liberazione di Ruggiero dall'isola d'Alcina
 - Marco da Gagliano – La Flora, performed at the Teatro Mediceo on October 14 to celebrate the wedding of Odoardo Farnese and Margherita de Medici
 - Nicholas Lanier – A musical setting (recitativo) of Christopher Marlowe's Hero and Leander[2]
 - Claudio Monteverdi – Il Ballo delle Ingrate
 
Births
    
- January 1 – Christoph Bernhard, German composer (died 1692)
 - date unknown – Robert Cambert, French composer of opera (died 1677)
 
Deaths
    
- January 21 – Gregor Aichinger, composer (born c.1565)
 - March – Alfonso Ferrabosco the younger, viol player and composer (born c.1575)[3]
 - March 12 or 13 – John Bull (composer), composer and organist (born c1562)[4]
 - November 16 – Paolo Quagliati, composer (born c. 1555)
 - date unknown – Aziz Mahmud Hudayi, Sufi saint, poet, author and composer (born 1541)
 
References
    
- Heinrich Schütz (30 May 2013). A Heinrich Schütz Reader: Letters and Documents in Translation. OUP USA. p. 58. ISBN 978-0-19-981220-2.
 - Matthew Spring (2001). The Lute in Britain: A History of the Instrument and Its Music. Oxford University Press. p. 376. ISBN 978-0-19-518838-7.
 - Ashbee, Andrew (January 2008j) [2004]. "Ferrabosco, John (bap. 1626, d. 1682)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/9355.(subscription required)
 - Paul Chappell (1970). A Portrait of John Bull, C. 1563-1628. Hereford Cathedral. p. 20.
 
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