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MADRIGAL (MUSIC)

A 'madrigal' is a setting for two or more voices of a secular text, often in Italian. The madrigal has its origins in the frottola, and was also influenced by the motet and the French chanson of the Renaissance. It is related mostly by name alone to the Italian trecento madrigal of the late 13th and 14th centuries; those madrigals were settings for 2 or 3 voices without accompaniment, or with instruments possibly doubling the vocal lines.
The madrigal was the most important secular form of music of its time. It bloomed especially in the second half of the 16th century, losing its importance by the third decade of the 17th century, when it vanished through the rise of newer secular forms as the opera and merged with the cantata and the dialogue.
Its rise started with the ''Primo libro di Madrigali'' of Philippe Verdelot, published in 1533 in Venice, which was the first book of identifiable madrigals. This publication was a great success and the form spread rapidly, first in Italy and up to the end of the century to several other countries in Europe. Especially in England the madrigal was highly appreciated after the publication of Nicholas Yonge's ''Musica Transalpina'' in 1588, a collection of Italian madrigals with translated texts which started a madrigal culture of its own. The madrigal had a much longer life in England than in the rest of Europe: composers continued to produce works of astonishing quality even after the form had gone out of fashion on the Continent (see English Madrigal School).
Late madrigalists were particularly ingenious with so-called "madrigalisms" — passages in which the music assigned to a particular word expresses its meaning, for example, setting ''riso'' (smile) to a passage of quick, running notes which imitate laughter, or ''sospiro'' (sigh) to a note which falls to the note below. This technique is also known as "word-painting" and can be found not only in madrigals but in other vocal music of the period. The most important of the late madrigalists are certainly Luca Marenzio, Carlo Gesualdo, and Claudio Monteverdi, who integrated in 1605 the basso continuo into the form and later composed the book ''Madrigali guerrieri et amorosi'' (1638) (Madrigals of War and Love), which is, however, an example of the early Baroque madrigal; some of the compositions in this book bear little relation to the ''a cappella'' madrigals of the previous century.

Contents
Madrigals today
Madrigal composers
Early composers of madrigals
The classic madrigal composers
The late madrigalists
Composers of Baroque "concerted" madrigals (with instruments)
English madrigal school
Media
External links

Madrigals today


Nowadays, madrigals are often sung by high school or college madrigal choirs often in the context of a madrigal dinner which may also include a play, Renaissance costumes, and instrumental chamber music.

Madrigal composers


Early composers of madrigals


Jacques Arcadelt

Francesco Corteccia, court composer to Cosimo I de' Medici

Adrian Willaert, Franco-Flemish composer, founder of the Venetian School

Costanzo Festa, the first native Italian composer of madrigals

Cypriano de Rore

Philippe Verdelot, one of the first madrigalists, also associated with the Medici court

Bernardo Pisano
The classic madrigal composers


Orlando di Lasso

Andrea Gabrieli

Claudio Monteverdi

Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina

Philippe de Monte

Francisco Leontaritis
The late madrigalists


Giaches de Wert

Luzzasco Luzzaschi

Luca Marenzio

Carlo Gesualdo

Sigismondo d'India
Composers of Baroque "concerted" madrigals (with instruments)


Orazio Vecchi

Adriano Banchieri

Giulio Caccini

Claudio Monteverdi

Heinrich Schütz

Hans Leo Hassler

Johann Hermann Schein
English madrigal school


William Byrd

John Dowland

John Farmer

Orlando Gibbons

Thomas Morley

Thomas Tomkins

Thomas Weelkes

John Wilbye

Thomas Bateson
Some 60 madrigals of the English School are published in The Oxford Book of English Madrigals

Media


External links



★ English translations of texts from Monteverdi's Fourth Book of Madrigals (Quarto libro dei madrigali) at http://marshall.charles.googlepages.com/

★ Read more about Early Music. Listen to free recordings of English Madrigals, free recordings of German Lieds and free recordings of Spanish Madrigals, from Umeå Akademiska Kör.


★ The scores for many madrigals can be found at the Choral Public Domain Library.
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