Wacław z Szamotuł was a student at the Lubrański Academy in Poznań later studying at Kraków University in 1538.
In 1547 or 1548 he was appointed composer to the court of Sigismund II Augustus.
In 1555 Wacław left Kraków, having received the title of "royal composer."
In the words of Szymon Starowolski, who wrote the first concise biography of Wacław, "If the gods had let him live longer, the Poles would have no need to envy the Italians their Palestrina, Lappi or Vedana."
His motets In te Domine speravi and Ego sum pastor bonus were the first Polish musical compositions to be published abroad.