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Madrigals: Music for Fun

madrigals: music for fun

prelude

  • 16th century musicians participated in a new flowering of national styles

  • printing press helped amateurs to sing for their own pleasure, further encouraging the growth of national styles

  • music could be sold as a commodity for the first time, served as an activity that friends and family could enjoy together

  • trend toward diverse national genres and styles - villancico, frottola, new chanson, madrigal

  • madrigal brought to a peal their interests in humanism, the individual, and realizing in music the accents, images and emotions of the text

the rise of national styles: italy and spain

frottola and lauda:

  • prevailed when northerners arrived

  • strophic, four-part homophonic songs with refrains

  • melody in upper voice

  • simple diatonic harmonies

  • words set syllabically to catchy repeating rhythmic patterns

  • frottole were highbrow versions of street music

  • laude were religious and devotional

  • published by petrucci publishing company

villanella and villancico:

  • villanella was a lively homophonic strophic piece that flourished in the neapolitan area and sometimes mimicked the madrigal

  • villancico was the most important form of secular polyphonic song in renaissance spain

    • composed for the aristocracy

    • short, syllabic, strophic, mostly homophonic

canzonetta and balletto:

  • balletic intended for dancing as well as singing or playing

    • originated "fa la la" refrains

italian madrigal

  • new appreciation for petrarch sparked a movement during which his sonnets were analyzed, discussed, edited and imitated

  • pietro bembo admired petrarch's combination of playfulness and seriousness, as well as his ability to match the sound qualities of his verses to their meanings

  • early madrigalists turned to petrarch for their texts

  • through-composed setting of a short poem - each line received a different musical setting reflecting the rhythm and sense of the words

  • artful and elevated, pastoral

  • madrigalists aimed to match the seriousness of playfulness of the poetry with the elegance or wit of their music in order to communicate the ideas and emotions of the poem

  • all voices have equal parts

  • 2000 unique collections of madrigals in a 70 year span

social settings:

  • sung for fun in a small group

  • written for enjoyment of the singers, performed at social gatherings, after meals, and at meetings

  • when specialized singers began to perform madrigals in court, composers decided to write more difficult music

concerto delle donne:

  • trio of trained singers who sang madrigals in court

  • gave listeners an appetite for high voices

  • singers became famous and there started to be a separation between performer and audience, leading composers to bring the audience into their work and lead the listener to understand the deeper meanings of the poetry

arcadelt:

  • church composers transferred their skills in sacred polyphony to the writing of secular madrigals

  • arcadelt's il bianco e dolce cigno is one the most famous early madrigals

rore:

  • worked in italy and became the madrigalist most admired by composers later in the century

  • da le belle contrade d'oriente captured the sense and feeling of the poem in petrarchan style

  • started using 5 voices

chromaticism:

  • theorists embraced chromaticism

  • took inspiration from greek ideas

  • motivated by expressive goals such as creating a sense of sorrow

marenzio:

  • towards the end of the 16th century, leading madrigalists were native italians rather than northerners

  • marenzio favoured pastoral poetry but was the most prolific

  • uses word painting devices/madrigalisms to evoke the meaning of individual words or phrases with a music image

vincentino and luzzaschi:

  • vincentino explored chromatic passages in all of his madrigals, published l'antica musica ridotta alla moderna prattica, designed a specially constructed harpsichord and organ that could handle quarter tones

  • luzzaschi became a master at improvising on vincentino's chromatic-enharmonic keyboards and greatly influenced gesualdo

gesualdo:

  • his music gets super weird and dissonant after he was implicated in a double murder

  • aristocratic amateur who wrote unusual and imaginative madrigals, usually dwelling on themes of torment and death

  • moved between diatonic and chromatic, dissonance and consonance, etc

monteverdi:

  • helped the genre to transition from polyphonic vocal ensembles to instrumentally accompanied songs for duet or larger ensembles

  • smooth combination of homophonic and contrapuntal part writing, sensitivity to sound and meaning of text, and free use of chromaticism and dissonance

the rise of national styles: france and england

  • composers developed a new light, fast, rhythmic chanson in four parts

  • syllabic and playful

  • forms didn't allow word painting and composers focused on fun melodies and rhythms rather than expression of the text

  • suited to amateur performance

  • chanson is evolving again

    • four voices

    • light, fast, strongly rhythmic

    • syllabic

    • playful, amorous, double meanings

  • italian culture brought to england

sermisy and janequin:

  • several of sermisy's chansons were so popular they were reprinted for decades and adapted into new forms, from dance melodies to psalm tunes to paintings

  • janequin turned sound effects into descriptive four-voice chansons using onomatopoeic syllables

lassus:

  • wide range of subject matter

  • accutely attuned to the text and the feelings

  • publication of madrigals translated into english accelerated their spread

  • morley (earliest and most prolific english madrigal composer) wrote balletts, canzonets and madrigals

  • triumphs of oriana - morley's collection of english madrigals by different composers

lute songs:

  • more personal and less social genre than the madrigal

  • reflects overall mood which much less word painting

  • lute accompaniment has a degree of independence

instrumental participation:

  • instrumental music remained closely associated with vocal music

  • instruments sometimes doubled or replaced voices

BD

Madrigals: Music for Fun

madrigals: music for fun

prelude

  • 16th century musicians participated in a new flowering of national styles

  • printing press helped amateurs to sing for their own pleasure, further encouraging the growth of national styles

  • music could be sold as a commodity for the first time, served as an activity that friends and family could enjoy together

  • trend toward diverse national genres and styles - villancico, frottola, new chanson, madrigal

  • madrigal brought to a peal their interests in humanism, the individual, and realizing in music the accents, images and emotions of the text

the rise of national styles: italy and spain

frottola and lauda:

  • prevailed when northerners arrived

  • strophic, four-part homophonic songs with refrains

  • melody in upper voice

  • simple diatonic harmonies

  • words set syllabically to catchy repeating rhythmic patterns

  • frottole were highbrow versions of street music

  • laude were religious and devotional

  • published by petrucci publishing company

villanella and villancico:

  • villanella was a lively homophonic strophic piece that flourished in the neapolitan area and sometimes mimicked the madrigal

  • villancico was the most important form of secular polyphonic song in renaissance spain

    • composed for the aristocracy

    • short, syllabic, strophic, mostly homophonic

canzonetta and balletto:

  • balletic intended for dancing as well as singing or playing

    • originated "fa la la" refrains

italian madrigal

  • new appreciation for petrarch sparked a movement during which his sonnets were analyzed, discussed, edited and imitated

  • pietro bembo admired petrarch's combination of playfulness and seriousness, as well as his ability to match the sound qualities of his verses to their meanings

  • early madrigalists turned to petrarch for their texts

  • through-composed setting of a short poem - each line received a different musical setting reflecting the rhythm and sense of the words

  • artful and elevated, pastoral

  • madrigalists aimed to match the seriousness of playfulness of the poetry with the elegance or wit of their music in order to communicate the ideas and emotions of the poem

  • all voices have equal parts

  • 2000 unique collections of madrigals in a 70 year span

social settings:

  • sung for fun in a small group

  • written for enjoyment of the singers, performed at social gatherings, after meals, and at meetings

  • when specialized singers began to perform madrigals in court, composers decided to write more difficult music

concerto delle donne:

  • trio of trained singers who sang madrigals in court

  • gave listeners an appetite for high voices

  • singers became famous and there started to be a separation between performer and audience, leading composers to bring the audience into their work and lead the listener to understand the deeper meanings of the poetry

arcadelt:

  • church composers transferred their skills in sacred polyphony to the writing of secular madrigals

  • arcadelt's il bianco e dolce cigno is one the most famous early madrigals

rore:

  • worked in italy and became the madrigalist most admired by composers later in the century

  • da le belle contrade d'oriente captured the sense and feeling of the poem in petrarchan style

  • started using 5 voices

chromaticism:

  • theorists embraced chromaticism

  • took inspiration from greek ideas

  • motivated by expressive goals such as creating a sense of sorrow

marenzio:

  • towards the end of the 16th century, leading madrigalists were native italians rather than northerners

  • marenzio favoured pastoral poetry but was the most prolific

  • uses word painting devices/madrigalisms to evoke the meaning of individual words or phrases with a music image

vincentino and luzzaschi:

  • vincentino explored chromatic passages in all of his madrigals, published l'antica musica ridotta alla moderna prattica, designed a specially constructed harpsichord and organ that could handle quarter tones

  • luzzaschi became a master at improvising on vincentino's chromatic-enharmonic keyboards and greatly influenced gesualdo

gesualdo:

  • his music gets super weird and dissonant after he was implicated in a double murder

  • aristocratic amateur who wrote unusual and imaginative madrigals, usually dwelling on themes of torment and death

  • moved between diatonic and chromatic, dissonance and consonance, etc

monteverdi:

  • helped the genre to transition from polyphonic vocal ensembles to instrumentally accompanied songs for duet or larger ensembles

  • smooth combination of homophonic and contrapuntal part writing, sensitivity to sound and meaning of text, and free use of chromaticism and dissonance

the rise of national styles: france and england

  • composers developed a new light, fast, rhythmic chanson in four parts

  • syllabic and playful

  • forms didn't allow word painting and composers focused on fun melodies and rhythms rather than expression of the text

  • suited to amateur performance

  • chanson is evolving again

    • four voices

    • light, fast, strongly rhythmic

    • syllabic

    • playful, amorous, double meanings

  • italian culture brought to england

sermisy and janequin:

  • several of sermisy's chansons were so popular they were reprinted for decades and adapted into new forms, from dance melodies to psalm tunes to paintings

  • janequin turned sound effects into descriptive four-voice chansons using onomatopoeic syllables

lassus:

  • wide range of subject matter

  • accutely attuned to the text and the feelings

  • publication of madrigals translated into english accelerated their spread

  • morley (earliest and most prolific english madrigal composer) wrote balletts, canzonets and madrigals

  • triumphs of oriana - morley's collection of english madrigals by different composers

lute songs:

  • more personal and less social genre than the madrigal

  • reflects overall mood which much less word painting

  • lute accompaniment has a degree of independence

instrumental participation:

  • instrumental music remained closely associated with vocal music

  • instruments sometimes doubled or replaced voices