Frische teutsche Liedlein is a five-part collection of songs, which was written and published in 1539-1556 by the doctor, composer and song collector Georg Forster (around 1510 in Amberg – 12 November 1568 in Nuremberg). It comprises 380 polyphonic, predominantly secular German songs. The collection later received its collective name. It is the most extensive and important song publication of the time and one of the most important sources for tenor singers (with the cantus firmus in the tenor, such as a version of Innsbruck, ich muss dich lassen by Heinrich Isaac and Mir ist ein rot Goldfingerlein by Ludwig Senfl).
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Mehrstimmiges Deutsches Liederbuch (1534) and Georg Forster's FrischeteutscheLiedlein (about 1540 onwards). According to Chester Lee Alwes, Heinrich...
Lochamer-Liederbuch and Glogauer Liederbuch. Georg Forster's FrischeteutscheLiedlein was first printed in 1536. In the period of Sturm und Drang, poets...
Forster, who published many of Lemlin's lieder in his collection FrischeteutscheLiedlein, as well as Jobst von Brandt, Caspar Othmayr, and Stefan Zirler...
Musikforschung. In 1942 he began publishing the five-part anthology FrischeteutscheLiedlein by the Renaissance composer Georg Forster. From 1948 on, he contributed...
found in numerous collections of his time, as in Georg Forster's FrischeteutscheLiedlein. Othmayr died in Nuremberg in 1553 at the age of 38. Robert Eitner...
vols. ii-iii ed. L. Hoffmann-Erbrecht, 1969, 1983 Georg Forster: FrischeteutscheLiedlein (1539–1556) ed. Kurt Gudewill, Das Erbe deutscher Musik [de],...