The Polyphony Database
polyphonydatabase@gmail.com
About the database❯
PolyphonyDatabase.com is a detailed catalogue of early music sources designed to help musicians perform, academics study, and enthusiasts explore a vast and glorious repertoire quickly and easily. It aims to combine the practicality of CPDL with the academic rigour and ambition of the RISM census, to make use of similar projects where possible, and to directly combat the frustrations performing musicians have with all existing resources.
Its three main goals are:
- To assist performers, directors, and editors by cataloguing the contents of primary sources, source concordances, and basic information about how each piece of music can be performed.
- To provide a reliable starting point for academic research by linking to library catalogues, other existing databases, and facsimile images of early music manuscripts and prints.
- To provide a repository for properly sourced critical editions, performing scores, and recordings of as much of this music as possible, each carefully vetted for typesetting quality and accuracy, and made available for free download, so that this music might be discovered and appreciated by a wider audience.
The database was founded by Francis Bevan in 2014 as an outlet for his editing hobby and is regularly updated by him and a small team of enthusiasts. If you would like to contribute some cataloguing time, recordings or editions, submit corrections, commission an edition or just donate some cash, please get in touch with Francis via email: polyphonydatabase@gmail.com. Read more about the project's history at the 2018 Crowdfunder page.
The best way to help fund the project is to commission performing editions. New editions can be made quickly for as little as £10.
Understanding the clef images
A red clef means the voice is missing from this source. Where there are no concordances to fill in the gaps, this means the piece will require reconstruction.
A green clef means the voice is incomplete in this source. This might denote a fragment of a larger work, or a e.g. canonic voice that isn't written out in full.
A faded clef means much of the piece can be performed without this voice. For example, an extra 6th voice in the Agnus Dei of an otherwise 5vv Mass setting, or a short gimel in a big votive antiphon. Filtering by number of voices will exclude these clefs, while filtering by a specific voice combination will include them.
A blue clef denotes a voice that uses more than one clef in this source - this is particularly prevalent in earlier printed sources. We've estimated the larger clef on the left to be the most used to give an idea of voice distribution at a glance.
An X clef is used as a placeholder for voices we know are necessary, but haven't yet worked out which! This can be because there are no extant sources for a missing voice and no reconstruction has yet been attempted (it will normally become obvious which voice is missing once editing starts), or because we have catalogued a source from an incomplete facsimile that we know to be complete elsewhere.
Title |
Function(s) |
Composer |
# |
Sources |
O splendor summe radians
|
|
Anon
|
4 |
(I-TVd 8)
Treviso, 1556-1569
(Choirbook, MS)
#35
|
|
Attrib: Anon |
Canon querite et invenientis = Pater Antonii ora pro nobis |
|
O stay awhile, mine eye retire
|
|
Ford, Thomas
d.1648
|
6 |
(GB-Och 56-60)
Oxford, c.1620
(Partbook, MS)
#72
|
|
Attrib: Thomas ffoord |
2 Bases |
|
O stelliferi conditor orbis
|
|
Anon
|
4 |
Motetti libro quarto (RISM 1505/2)
Venice: Petrucci, Ottaviano, 1505
(Choirbook, Print)
RISM
#34
|
|
Attrib: Anon |
|
|
Ostendit mihi angelus
|
|
Massaino, Tiburtio
before 1550–after 1608
|
5 |
|
Ostendit mihi angelus
|
|
Porta, Costanzo
c.1528–1601
|
4 |
|
Ostendit mihi angelus fontem aquae
|
|
Vernizzi, Ottavio
1569–1649
|
3 |
|
Ostez la main, ma mère nous regarde
|
|
Phinot, Dominique
c.1510–c.1556
|
4 |
|
O stulti et tardi corde - Mane nobiscum Domine - Nonne cor nostrum ardens
|
|
Otto, Georg
1550–1618
|
8 |
Opus musicum novum, continens textus ... (RISM O276)
Opus musicum novum, continens textus evangelicos, dierum festorum, dominicarum et feriarum, per totum annum ... octo, sex & quinque vocibus compositum ... liber primus motetarum octo vocum
Kassel: Wessel, Wilhelm, 1604
(Partbook, Print)
RISM
#7
|
|
Attrib: Georgio Ottone |
|
|
O stupor et gaudium
|
|
Cartari, Giuliano
1536-1539–1613
|
8 |
|
O stupor et gaudium - In te signis radians
|
|
Contino, Giovanni
c.1513–1574
|
5 |
|
O stupor et gaudium - In te signis radians
|
|
Riccio, Teodore
c.1540–c.1600
|
6 |
Sacrae cantiones, quas vulgo motesta ... (RISM R1286)
Sacrae cantiones, quas vulgo motesta vocant, quinque, sex, et octo vocum, tum viva voca, tum etiam omnis generis instrumentis cantatu commodissimae
Nuremberg: Gerlach, Katharina and Gerlach, Dietrich, 1576
(Partbook, Print)
RISM
#27
|
|
Attrib: Theodoro Riccio Brixiano |
|
|
O stupor et gaudium - Te igitur obsecramus
|
|
Anon
|
5 |
|
O stupor et gaudium - Te igitur obsecramus
|
|
Anon
|
5 |
|
O suavitas et dulcedo
|
|
Nocetti, Flaminio
d.1618
|
6 |
|
O suavitas et dulcedo
Pothárn Imre (Up a minor tihrd)
Pothárn Imre
|
|
Monte, Philippe de
1521–1603
|
8 |
|
O summa vera et sempiterna Trinitas
|
Trinity |
Ruffo, Vincenzo
c.1508–1587
|
6 |
|
O summe pontifex
|
|
Rubini, Nicolò
1584–1625
|
7 |
|
O summe rerum conditor
|
|
Anon
|
4 |
|
O sydus Hispaniae
|
|
Porta, Costanzo
c.1528–1601
|
5 |
|
O templum valde admirandum
|
|
Boschetti, Gerolamo
fl.1591–1611
|
8 |
Modulationum sacrarum, seu Hymonroum ... (RISM B3789)
Modulationum sacrarum, seu Hymonroum Rhythmicorum (Vulgo motecta dictorum) anni totius sollemnioribus festis deservientem. Atque istae duobus choris ad invicem separatis cum octo vocibus concinuntur
Rome: Coattino, Francesco, 1594
(Partbook, Print)
RISM
#18
|
|
Attrib: Hieronymi Boschetti |
|
|
O tempo bom tudo cura
|
|
Anon
|
3 |
|
O tempo o ciel volubil - E sarebbe hora
|
|
Lassus, Orlande de
c.1532–1594
|
5 |
|
O tenebroso giorno
|
|
Gesualdo, Carlo
1566–1613
|
5 |
|
O ter beatum - Tu me premebas - Qui mentis ergo - Mulis equisque ne similis
|
|
Servin, Jean
c.1530–after 1595
|
4 |
|
O that most rare breast
David Fraser (SATTB)
Alamire & Fretwork
|
|
Byrd, William
c.1540–1623
|
5 |
(GB-Ob Mus.Sch.e.423)
Oxford, c.1575-1586
(Partbook, MS)
#1
|
|
Attrib: Mr Birde |
|
Psalmes, Sonets, & songs of sadness a... (RISM B5209)
Psalmes, Sonets, & songs of sadness and pietie, made into Musicke of five parts: whereof, some of them going abroad among divers, in untrue coppies, are heere truely corrected, and th'other being Songs very rare and newly composed, are heere published, for the recreation of all such as delight in Musicke
London: East, Thomas, 1588
(Partbook, Print)
RISM
#35
|
|
Attrib: William Byrd |
The funerall Songs of that honorable Gent Sir Philip Sidney, Knight |
|