Isaija Srbin
50 top tracks
Isaija Srbin
50 top tracks
Albums

Muzika Stare Srbije
Isaija Srbin

Music Of Old Serbia
Isaija Srbin

Muzika Stare Srbije (XII - XVII v)
Isaija Srbin

Antologija
Isaija Srbin

Antologija srpske duhovne muzike
Isaija Srbin

Srbljak
Isaija Srbin

Srpski Melodi Od 14. - 18. Veka
Isaija Srbin

East Empire Light
Isaija Srbin

Muzika Stare Srbije (Crkveni Napevi Od 14. Do 18. Veka)
Isaija Srbin

Music Of Old Serbia LP
Isaija Srbin

Early Church Music XV-XVIII century
Isaija Srbin

Anthology of Serbian church music
Isaija Srbin
Biography
Isaiah the Serb (Serbian: Исаија Србин/Isaija Srbin) was a Serbian Orthodox hieromonk and composer of chants who flourished in the second half of the 15th century. Along with Kir Joakim, Kir Stefan the Serb, Nikola the Serb he faithfully followed Byzantine musical tradition, writing in the late kalophonic style of the 14th and 15th centuries....Read more on Last.fm
Read more
Isaiah the Serb (Serbian: Исаија Србин/Isaija Srbin) was a Serbian Orthodox hieromonk and composer of chants who flourished in the second half of the 15th century. Along with Kir Joakim, Kir Stefan the Serb, Nikola the Serb he faithfully followed Byzantine musical tradition, writing in the late kalophonic style of the 14th and 15th centuries.
Isaiah worked in the Matejče Monastery, near Kumanovo (in modern Macedonia). He was a prolific author of acolouthias (in Old Church Slavonic послѣдованиѥ). Each acolouthia was an anthology of liturgical chants and psalm settings, both his own and others'. Isaiah was a very well-educated composer of both bilingual and purely Greek hymns. His masterpiece, Serbian Polyeleos, appears in two manuscripts, one version with a Serbian recension of the text, the other with a Greek. The existence of Greek and Slavonic settings in his works shows that Serbian services were commonly bilingual. He was also the author of the bilingual Trisagion. Many of his works are short syllabic hymns honouring the Serbian saints.
Isaiah's melodies, some syllabic, others more melismatic, show his inventiveness, and his ability to introduce new and original elements, especially from the Serbian tradition, within the compositional framework of the Byzantine chant, thus creating a new and distinctive style: the Serbo-Byzantine school. His works represent two thirds of preserved Serbian Medieval music. He was also immensely popular after his death, with his compositions being copied until the late 18th century. His works are also included in the Anthologion 928 from the National Library of Greece, Athens. <a href="https://www.last.fm/music/Isaija+Srbin">Read more on Last.fm</a>. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
