The year 1606 in music involved some significant events.
Events
Publications
- Agostino Agazzari
- (Rome: Aloysio Zannetti)
- Second book of madrigals for five voices (Venice: Ricciardo Amadino)
- Gregor Aichinger
- Mass for the solemnity of Corpus Christi (Augsburg: Johannes Praetorius)
- for three and four voices (Dillingen: Adam Metzler)
- (Dillingen: Adam Metzler)
- Richard Allison â An howres recreation in Musicke, apt for instruments and voyces (London: John Windet)
- Felice Anerio â (Rome: Aloysio Zannetti)
- Bartolomeo Barbarino â for solo voice with theorbo, harpsichord, or other instruments (Venice: Ricciardo Amadino), also includes a song for two tenors
- John Bartlet â A Booke of Ayres with a Triplicitie of Musicke (London: John Windet), a collection of lute songs for 1, 2, & 4 voices
- Sethus Calvisius â for four voices (Leipzig: Abraham Lamberg), a motet
- Giovanni Paolo Cima â (Milan: Simon Tini & Filippo Lomazzo)
- Camillo Cortellini â Psalms for eight voices (Venice: Giacomo Vincenti)
- Christian Erbach â for five voices, parts 2 & 3 (Dillingen: Adam Meltzer), a collection of introits, alleluias, and post-communion songs
- Giacomo Finetti â for four voices (Venice: Ricciardo Amadino), music for Vespers
- Marco da Gagliano â Fourth book of madrigals for five voices (Venice: Angelo Gardano)
- Konrad Hagius â (ie. Magnificat) for four, five, and six voices (Dillingen: Adam Meltzer)
- Sigismondo d'India â First book of madrigals for five voices (Milan: Agostino Tradate)
- Marc'Antonio Ingegneri
- Second book of hymns for four voices (Venice: Ricciardo Amadino), published posthumously
- Sixth book of madrigals for five voices (Venice: Ricciardo Amadino), published posthumously
- Claude Le Jeune
- for two, three, four, five, six, seven, and eight voices (Paris: Pierre Ballard), published posthumously
- (Eight-line poems on the vanity and inconstancy of the world) for three and four voices (Paris: Pierre Ballard), published posthumously
- Tiburtio Massaino â for eight, nine, ten, twelve, fifteen, and sixteen voices, Op. 31 (Venice: Angelo Gardano)
- Ascanio Mayone â First book of ricercars for three voices (Naples: Giovanni Battista Sottile)
- Claudio Merulo â Second book of (Venice: Angelo Gardano & fratelli), published posthumously
- Girolamo Montesardo â , published in Florence, the first printed source of alfabeto notation for the guitar
- Nicola Parma â Motets for eight and twelve voices (Venice: Ricciardo Amadino)
- Serafino Patta - (Venice: Giacomo Vincenti)
- Enrico Antonio Radesca (Radesca di Foggia) â Second book of canzonettas, madrigals and arie della romana for two voices (Milan: Simon Tini & Filippo Lomazzo)
Classical music
Opera
Births
Deaths
References