Centuries of dedication and folklore in the chapels and courts of early Italy, Spain and Portugal produced music with rhythms that reverberated across the Mediterranean. In this recording spanning three centuries of vocal and instrumental music, a diverse collection of lyric poetry, dances, Italian spiritual songs, and Galician-Portuguese Cantigas de Santa Maria tell of the Virgin’s sometimes-humorous, always-incredible miracles.
| # | Track Name | Written By | Listen |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Pues que tu, Reyna del çielo | Juan del Encina? (1485-c.1530) | Alternative content |
| 2. | Ay Santa Maria | Cancionero Musical de Palacio (15th-16th-cen. Spanish) | |
| 3. | Cantiga #252 | Cantigas de Santa Maria (13th-14th-cen. Spanish) | |
| 4. | Cantiga #353 | Cantigas de Santa Maria | Alternative content |
| 5. | Una sañosa porfía | Juan del Encina | Alternative content |
| 6. | Memento mei o sacra Virgo | Lauda, (Italian, ca. 1500) | |
| 7. | Or piangiamo, ché piange Maria | Florence Laudario (early 14th-cen. Italian) | Alternative content |
| 8. | O Virginetta bella | Lauda, (Italian, ca. 1500) | |
| 9. | Digamos Ave Maria | Auroros de Murcia, Breviarium Gothicum (1502) | |
| 10. | Cantiga #42 | Cantigas de Santa Maria | |
| 11. | Cantiga #166 | Cantigas de Santa Maria | |
| 12. | Ave donna sanctissima | Florence Laudario | |
| 13. | Kyrie from Missa de Nuestra Señora | Juan de Anchieta (1462 - 1523) | |
| 14. | Cantiga #10 | Cantigas de Santa Maria | Alternative content |
| 15. | Virgo prudentissima | Francisco Guerrero (1528-1599) | |
| 16. | Cantiga #129 | Cantigas de Santa Maria | Alternative content |