Czech Music
The Oldest Music Manuscripts in Bohemia (around 1000 to 1350)
Plankt of Virgin Maria (14th century)
Medieval Love Lyrics (14th and 15th centuries)
Music in Bohemia under the Reign of Emperor Charles IV (around 1350)
Carols of the Czech Middle Ages (14th to 16th centuries)
Student and Literary Songs (16th century - Benešov Hymn Book)
Advent Matins - Czech Advent Songs (16th century - the Benešov Hymn Book)
Music in Prague in the Reign of Emperor Rudolph II - J. Handl-Gallus (Moralia, Harmoniae morales),
N. Zangius, Ch. Luython, J. Regnart, Ph. de Monte
Kryštof Harant of Polžice (1550-1591) - Missa Quinis vocibus, Maria Kron
Václav Adam Michna of Otradovice (1600-1676) - The Czech Lute (the Sanctity Music)
Samuel Capricornus (1628-1665) - Opus misicum
Václav Karel Holan Rovenský (1644-1718) - Capella regia musicalis
Jan Dismas Zelenka (1679-1745) - In Convertendo Domine, Responsoria
Bohuslav Matěj Černohorský (1684-1742) - Quare Dominum irasceris, Quem lapidaverunt,
Laudetur Jesus Christus
Šimon Brixi (1693-1735) - Litaniae de Venerabili sacramento
Edmund Pascha (1714-1772) - Harmoniae pastoralis
František Ignác Tůma (1704-1774) - Stabat mater
Leopold Koželuh (1747-1818) - Three Nocturns
Bohuslav Martinů (1890-1959) - Madrigals (1939), Part-Song Book (1959)
František Chaun (1921-1981) - Microcantata, "Whatever I Remembered from the Latin Lessons"
Petr Eben (1929-2007) - Pragensia
Václav Riedelbauch (1947) - Songs and Plays (on extracts from Shakespeare's Sonnets)
Juraj Filas (1955) - Lauretti
Jan Rychlík (1916-1964) - The Gallows Madrigals
Pavel Bořkovec (1894-1972) - Madrigals on Time
Dalibor Vačkář (1906) - Songs to Sewing
Ivan Kurz (1947) - The Moravian Contemplatings
Luboš Fišer (1935) - Songs for the Blind King John of Luxembourgh
Ctirad Kohoutek (1929) - The Country Like a Garden
Ilja Hurník (1922-2013) - The Season Madrigals
Miloš Štědroň (1942) - Gioa dolorosa, Advices to the Cook
Milan Slavický (1947) - Pendulum of the Time
Arnošt Košťál (1920) - Forest Robber's
Otomar Kvěch (1950) - Spring Motives
World Music
The Italian Madrigal (around 1350-1650)
Jacopo da Bologna, Francesco Landini, M. Cara, B. Donati, N. Vincentino, L. Marenzio, G. Gastoldi,
G. di Venosa, C. Monteverdi, A. Banchieri
Carols of the Medieval Europe (Anonymus of the 14th and 15th centuries)
Franco-Flemish Era (around 1400-1550)
G. Dufay, J. Ockeghem, J. Obrecht, N. Gombert, A. Willaert, Josquin Desprez (mass, chansons)
Orlando di Lasso (mottets, madrigals)
French Chansons (around 1300-1600)
Guillaume d' Amiens, G. Machaut (mass, chansons, Solage), G. Binchois, P. Certon, T. Arbeau,
P. Attaignant, C. Jannequin
The Development of the German Song (around 1250-1650)
Heinrich von Meissen the Salzburg Monk Herman, T. Stolzer, H. Isaac, J. Regnart, J. H. Schein,
H. L. Hassler, M. Praetorius, H. Schütz, J. Brahms
The English Madrigal (the 12th to the half of the 17th centuries)
The Beginnings of the Madrigals Reaching into Its Prosperity in the Period of Elizabeth I.
J. Dunstable, L. Plummer, W. Byrd, J. Dowland, T. Bateson, T. Morley, J. Jenkins, O. Gibbons,
J. Wilbye, T. Weelkes
The Spanish Music - Juan del Encina - Cancionero musical (the half of the 15th to the 17th centuries)
F. de Penalosa, F. de la Torre, C. Morales
The Contemporary World Music
Maurice Ravel (1875-1937) - 3 Chansons, Paul Hindemith (1895-1962) - 6 Chansons,
Zoltán Kodály (1882-1967) - Négy olasz madrigál, Béla Bartók - 4 Slovak Folk Songs
Instrumental Music
Jacob Obrecht, Josquin Despres, Jan Pieterszoon, Orlando di Lasso, Florentino Maschera,
Girol mo Frescobaldi, Giovanni Batista Grillo, Charles Luithon, Michael Pretorius, Valerius Otto,
Pedro Heredia, Jan Dismas Zelenka, Josef Mysliveček, Bohuslav Martinů.