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Hieronymus Praetorius
August 10, 1560 - January 27, 1629
born in Hamburg, composed during the Renaissance period
Biography
Considered the founder of seventeenth century German organ music, Hamburg church musician Hieronymus Praetorius was also a copyist and music editor, compiling important collections of monophonic German and Latin service music and German chorales. His own taste as a composer, though, was for polychoral church music, and he is credited with importing the rich Venetian choral style to Germany.

Praetorius studied with his organist father, Jacob Praetorius, and with other figures in Hamburg and Cologne in the mid-1570s. His first church job was as organist at Erfurt from 1580 to 1582; he gave up this position to assist his father at Hamburg's Jacobikirche, and upon his father's death in 1586 he was named the church's first organist. He held this job for the rest of his life.

Almost all of his sacred choral music was published after he turned 50, although it is likely that he had been working on the scores for many years. He specialized in parody masses, based on motets, and wrote more than 100 motets of his own (including a few secular wedding motets). About half of these motets are polychoral works for two to four groups of singers, and mimic the progressive Venetian style of the time, with rich contrasts of texture and harmony, and quite active rhythm.