Program: #25-26🏆 Air Date: Jun 23, 2025
The Czech ensemble Fraternitas Litteratorum presents a program of music for Emperor Rudolf II as it was heard in Prague in 1609.
Next: ⮞ #25-27 🔒🏆Three from Les Arts Florissants, Part 1
NOTE: All of the music on this program is from rogue recording Caesar Vive! and features the ensemble Fraternitas Litteratorum. It is in the Supraphon label and is SU 3898-2.
One of the most significant eras of Czech musical history took place during the reign of Emperor Rudolf II (1552-1612) at Prague Castle. Rudolf inherited an outstanding court ensemble for whichthe most celebrated European composers of the day wrote music. This new recording features two personalities in particular: Philippe de Monte, the emperor's longtime musical director, and CarlLuython, an organist one generation younger and composer of the seven-voice mass Caesar Vive! The Fraternitas Litteratorum ensemble, which specializes in performing the vocal polyphony of the 15th and 16th centuries, has here created a picture of the musical life of Rudolf's chambers and gardens, including the liturgical and sacred works of his time.
This album was recorded with the generous support of the city of Brandýs nad Labem - Stará Boleslav in the chapel of the castle at Brandýs nad Labem.
From Czech Radio: You wouldn't usually associate music with mysterious arts of the alchemist, but in Prague, at the beginning of the 17th century, just about anything was possible. In Encore today, we look at "alchemical" music - or to be more precise, music composed by an alchemist.
This is on a new CD on the Supraphon label entitled 'Caesar Vive! Prague 1609 - Music for Emperor Rudolf II' by the vocal ensemble Fraternitas Litteratorum, which means 'literary brotherhood'. The alchemist in question is Michael Maier, who lived from 1568 - 1622, and who was active in the court of the Habsburg Emperor Rudolph II.
Rudolph chose to rule from Prague. He had a keen interest in the arts and sciences, and attracted to his court the likes of Tycho de Brahe, the Danish astronomer, and Johannes Kepler, the German mathematician and astronomer. But he also was a great patron of alchemists, including Michael Maier, who created a work called Atalanta Fugiens, a so-called 'emblem book' containing 50 illustrations, 50 epigrams, some discourses, and 50 canons or fugues.
The emblems - that is the illustrations - are enigmatic and full of symbols - quite mysterious. One is entitled 'take an egg and smite it with a fiery sword', and shows a man preparing to cleave a large egg with a sword. The poetry relates to it and so, presumably, does the music. It would take a lot of specialized knowledge - and imagination - to figure it all out.

The disk contains music chiefly by foreign composers, such as the Flemish composer Carl Luython, but there is a lovely Marian hymn by a very important figure in Czech history, Krystof Harant z Polzic a Bezdruzic, who lived from 1564 to 1621. He was a Renaissance man - a writer, soldier, pilgrim, hunter, poet and musician.
He made a fateful switch from Catholicism to Protestantism in 1618, and later participated in the bombardment of the Emperor's Palace in Vienna, so after the battle of White Mountain in 1620 in which the Catholic forces beat the Protestants, his days were numbered. Like many of his fellow Czech Protestant nobles, he was executed on the Old Town Square.
But before he decided to switch sides, he wrote some masses and a lovely setting of a popular hymn to the Virgin Mary, called 'Maria Kron', which you can hear on the CD.
The name of the ensemble Fraternitas Litteratorum on this CD has historical roots. There were well over a hundred such fraternities in the Czech lands before 1620, after which they too presumably became casualties of White Mountain. They were simply groups of 'literate' townspeople, all men, who sang masses in church services. The modern day ensemble, founded fairly recently, is exploring some of the vast repertoire from the 15th and 16th centuries, which lies archived in churches, monasteries and chateaux here in the Czech Republic.

I. Celebration Mass in Honor of His Imperial Grace
- Incipite Domino
Composed By: Ph. de Monte*
2:05 - Missa basim: Caesar vive! – Kyrie
Composed By: C. Luython*
2:33 - Missa basim: Caesar vive! – Gloria
Composed By: C. Luython*
3:06 - Peccantem me quotidie
Composed By: Ph. de Monte*
1:54 - Missa basim: Caesar vive! – Credo
Composed By: C. Luython*
5:50 - O quam suavis est
Composed By: Ph. de Monte*
2:03 - Missa basim: Caesar vive! – Sanctus
Composed By: C.Luython*
2:20 - Missa basim: Caesar vive! – Agnus Dei
Composed By: C. Luython*
3:18
II. Rosetum Marianum
- Tiento
Composed By: Tomas De Santa-Maria*
0:51 - Maria zart von edler Art
1:05 - Maria Kron
Composed By: K. Harant*
2:16 - Maria klar
Composed By: F. Sales*
2:05 - Maria ein Reis
Composed By: C. Luython*
2:20 - Toccata
Composed By: L. Luzzaschi*
1:47
III. The Alchemical Cabinet
- Romulus hirta lupae
Composed By: M. Maier*
1:38 - Sol, fax clara poli
Composed By: M. Maier*
1:17 - Ex patre Myrrha
Composed By: M. Maier*
1:44 - Christe eleison
Composed By: G. Cavazzoni*
1:10
IV. The Emperor's Chambers and Gardens
- Ancor che co'l partire
Composed By: C. de Rore*, R. Rogniono*
3:29 - Cor mio non mi lasciar
Composed By: A. Orologio*
4:43 - Ricercar
Composed By: G. Fatorini*
1:05 - Wiewol sich vil
Composed By: J. Regnart*
2:08 - Nun sih ich mich
Composed By: J. Regnart*
3:14
Next: ⮞ #25-27 🔒🏆Three from Les Arts Florissants, Part 1
