1569 in music
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Events
    
- January – Fabrizio Dentice entered the service of Ottavio Farnese, Duke of Parma as a lutenist
 - July 22 – Lodovico Bassano is appointed to the London-based Bassano recorder consort, retrospectively effective to 29 September 1568.[1]
 - October – Valentin Bakfark, Hungarian lutenist, is arrested on suspicion of involvement in a Hungarian rebellion against his employer, Emperor Maximilian II, but he is quickly released.[2]
 - date unknown – A portrait of Josquin des Prez, possibly painted in his lifetime, is installed as a side panel of a triptych in the church of Ste Gudule, Brussels. It was destroyed a decade later, along with all the other images in the church, by Protestant iconoclasts.[3]
 
Publications
    
    Secular music
    
- Jacques Arcadelt
- Sixth book of chansons (Paris: Le Roy & Ballard), published posthumously
 - Ninth book of chansons (Paris: Le Roy & Ballard), published posthumously
 
 - Filippo Azzaiolo – Il terzo libro delle villotte del fiore alla padoana con alcune napolitanae e bergamasche, for four voices (Venice: Antonio Gardano)
 - Ippolito Chamaterò
- Il secondo libro delli madrigali, for four voices (Venice: Girolamo Scotto)
 - Il secondo libro delli madrigali, for five voices (Venice: Girolamo Scotto)
 - Il terzo libro delli madrigali, for five voices (Venice: Girolamo Scotto)
 - Il quarto libro delli madrigali, for five voices (Venice: Girolamo Scotto)
 
 - Giovanni Matteo Faà di Bruno – First book of madrigals for five voices (Venice: Antonio Gardano)
 - Giovanni Ferretti – Second book of Canzoni alla napolitana for five voices (Venice: Girolamo Scotto)
 - Giulio Fiesco – First book of Musica nova for five voices (Venice: Antonio Gardano), the first book to set the poetry of Giovanni Battista Guarini
 - Tiburtio Massaino – First book of madrigals for four voices (Venice: Antonio Gardano)
 - Philippe de Monte
- First book of madrigals for six voices (Venice: Claudio da Correggio)
 - Second book of madrigals for six voices (Venice: Girolamo Scotto)
 - Second book of madrigals for four voices (Venice: Girolamo Scotto)
 
 - Costanzo Porta – Second book of madrigals for five voices (Venice: Antonio Gardano)
 
Sacred music
    
- Paolo Aretino – Magnificat for five voices, book 1 (Venice: Claudio Correggio)
 - Joachim a Burck – Symbolum apostolicum, nicenum, et canticum symbolum sanctorum Augustinii et Ambrosii for four voices (Mühlhausen: Georg Hantzsch)
 - Ippolito Chamaterò – First book of masses for five and seven voices (Venice: Girolamo Scotto)
 - Sigmund Hemmel – Der ganz Psalter Davids for four voices (Tubingen: Ulrich Morharts), a German-language psalter, published posthumously
 - Paolo Isnardi
- Psalmi omnes ad vesperas per totum annum for four voices (Venice: Antonio Gardano)
 - Psalmi omnes qui ad vesperas for five voices (Venice: heirs of Girolamo Scotto)
 
 - Orlande de Lassus – Cantiones aliquot for five voices (Munich: Adam Berg), a collection of motets
 - Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina – Liber primus motettorum, for five to seven voices, published in Rome
 
Births
    
- 16 November – Paul Sartorius, composer and organist (died 1609)
 - probable – Tobias Hume, viol player and composer (died 1645)
 
Deaths
    
- 11 September – Vincenza Armani, Italian opera singer, musician and composer
 - 20 September – Agostino Agostini, Italian composer and singer
 - date unknown – Hoste da Reggio, composer (born c. 1520)
 
References
    
- David Lasocki, Denis Arnold, and Fabio Ferraccioli, "Bassano: (2) Lodovico Bassano", The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell (London: Macmillan Publishers, 2001).
 - Peter Király, "Bakfark [Bacfarc, Bakfarc, Bakfarkh, Bakffark] [Greff alias Bakfark, Greff Bakfark], Valentin", The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell (London: Macmillan Publishers, 2001).
 - Barbara Haggh, "Josquin’s Portrait: New Evidence", in From Ciconia to Sweelinck: Donum natalicium Willem Elders, edited by Albert Clement and Eric Jas (Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1994): 91–110.
 
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