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The year 1665 in music involved some significant events.
Events
- May 27 – John Loosemore completes the construction of the organ at Exeter Cathedral.
 - Francesco Cavalli becomes first organist of St Mark's Basilica in Venice.
 
Bands formed
- Band of the Grenadier Guards, under the terms of a Royal Warrant issued the previous year.[1]
 
Publications
- Christoph Bernhard – Geistliche Harmonien, Op.1
 - Wojciech Bobowski – Mezmurlar, a collection of psalms in Turkish
 - Giovanni Felice Sances – Missa Sanctae Mariae Magdalenae
 - Christopher Simpson – The Principles of Practical Musick
 
Classical music
- John Blow – I will always give thanks
 - Maurizio Cazzati 
- Sonate a 2, 3, 4 e 5 con alcune per tromba, Op.35
 - Messa e salmi a 5 voci con 4 istromenti, Op.36
 
 - Jean Baptiste Lully – La naissance de Vénus, LWV 27 (ballet, premiered Jan. 26 in Paris)
 - Guillaume-Gabriel Nivers – Livre d'orgue contenant cent pièces de tous les tons de l'église, the first organ collection that featured forms that became standard for the French Baroque organ school
 
Opera
- Antonio Bertali – L'Alcindo
 - Andrea Mattioli – Ciro
 
Births
- February 21 (baptized) – Benedikt Anton Aufschnaiter, Austrian Baroque composer (died 1742)
 - March 17 – Élisabeth Jacquet de La Guerre, harpsichordist and composer (died 1729)[2]
 - date unknown
- Benedikt Anton Aufschnaiter, composer (died 1742)
 - Nicolaus Bruhns, organist and composer (died 1697)
 - Johann Nikolaus Hanff, organist and composer (died 1712)
 - José de Torres, composer, organist, music theorist and music publisher (died 1738)
 
 - probable – Carlo Giuseppe Testore, luthier (died 1716)
 
Deaths
- January 21 – Domenico Mazzochi, Italian composer (born 1592)
 - November 16 – João Lourenço Rebelo, Portuguese court composer (born 1610)
 - December 10 – Tarquinio Merula, organist, violinist and composer (born c.1594)
 
Notes
- ↑ Gordon Turner and Alwyn W Turner. "The Band of the Grenadier Guards". Archived from the original on 2010-10-08. Retrieved 2009-09-01.
 - ↑ Hopkins Porter, Cecelia (2014). Five Lives in Music: Women Performers, Composers, and Impresarios from the Baroque to the Present. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. p. 53. ISBN 978-0-25208-009-8.
 
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