Madrigals, Part 5

10.31022/b222 ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marco da Gagliano

Marco da Gagliano's Quinto libro de madrigali a cinque voci was published in October 1608, a little less than two years after his previous book. It contains fourteen madrigals for five voices and one for seven, all composed by Gagliano. The poets represented include Giambattista Marino, Giovanbattista Strozzi, both the older and the younger, Cosimo Galletti, and Ottavio Rinuccini. The madrigals of book 5 are quite varied in their style and their treatment of text. Many are light and remarkably concise, like the canzonetta-influenced madrigals of the Quarto libro, and most often set text syllabically to shorter rhythmic values in motives that alternate between homophony (or near homophony) and polyphony, imitative or nonimitative. Some, however, set poetry very differently. A three-part setting of a Marino sonnet, for instance, is filled with virtuoso melisma, probably intended for the professional singers of the Medici court. Book 5 also includes a concertato madrigal for seven singers and basso continuo that bears the prescriptive direction “per cantare e sonare” (for voices and instruments) in the basso partbook. Although there is no notational indication of instruments, the basso part lacks text for several measures, and it is likely that it was performed with improvised chords on an instrument. The book also contains two threnodies for Count Cammillo della Gheradesca that are in a somber and more traditional polyphony and contrast with the rest of the book's contents.

Music ◽  
2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Bane

The air de cour (courtly song) is a genre of secular vocal music produced in France during the late 16th and first half of the 17th century. The term first appeared in a collection of twenty-two solo vocal pieces with lute accompaniment published in Paris in 1571 by Adrian Le Roy. Le Roy stated that the origins of the new genre lay in the courtly appropriation of a popular vocal form, the vaudeville, and contrasted its lightness and simplicity with the “arduous” chansons of Orlande de Lassus. These and subsequent airs de cour are marked by brief, usually bipartite forms, limited vocal ranges, homophonic textures, strophic texts, syllabic text settings, and the elevated, serious tone of poetry. Unlike Le Roy’s airs, however, most 16th-century examples are for four or five voices without lute accompaniment. Some also exhibit rhythmic features suggestive of musique mesurée à l’antique. The genre peaked in both production and popularity during the reign of Louis XIII (1610–1643). Many of the era’s preeminent composers contributed to the genre, including Pierre Guédron, Antoine Boësset, and Étienne Moulinié. Airs de cour of the 17th century appeared in three forms, all published by the Ballard firm: four- or five-voice polyphony; arrangements of polyphonic airs de cour for solo voice with lute or guitar accompaniment (the most popular form); and solo voice without accompaniment of any kind. The poetic texts of airs de cour are usually anonymous, and they most often treat themes of love with a limited and precious vocabulary then current among courtly circles. A number of 17th-century editors also produced sacred parodies of popular airs de cour. Amateur musicians were the primary audience of airs de cour, but professional singers performed them as well, often with improvised ornaments and diminutions. Around mid-century the air de cour began to lose ground to new vocal genres in France, in particular the air sérieux, which featured more regular meters and basso continuo accompaniment intended for theorbo or harpsichord. Despite its disappearance from French music publishing, the reserved melodies, conservative harmony, and poetic language forged in the air de cour continued to undergird French vocal music throughout the 17th century and into the 18th. This bibliography limits itself to the air de cour proper, excluding both the air sérieux and the minor vocal genres (such as the chanson à boire, chanson à danser, and récit de ballet) contemporaneous with the air de cour.


2016 ◽  
Vol 69 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-46
Author(s):  
Tim Carter

Monteverdi's Il sesto libro de madrigali a cinque voci (1614) is often viewed as an outlier in his secular output. His Fourth and Fifth Books (1603, 1605) were firmly embroiled in the controversy with Artusi over the seconda pratica, while his Seventh (1619) sees him shifting style in favor of the new trends that were starting to dominate music in early seventeenth-century Italy: the Sixth Book falls between the cracks. But it also suffers—in modern eyes, at least—for the fact that it reflects the composer's first encounters with the poetry of Giambattista Marino, marking what many see as the start of a fundamental reorientation, if not downward spiral, in his secular vocal music. The problems are exposed by one of the Marino settings in the Sixth Book, “Batto, qui pianse Ergasto: ecco la riva,” in which an unnamed speaker tells Batto how Ergasto has been abandoned by Clori. The text has often been misunderstood. Uncovering the sources for the story—and the literary identities of Batto, Ergasto, and Clori—forces a new reading of the poetry and more particularly of Monteverdi's music. It also answers some profound questions in terms of how best to address issues of narration and representation, and of diegesis and mimesis, in this complex repertory.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Dirk Mürbe ◽  
Martin Kriegel ◽  
Julia Lange ◽  
Hansjörg Rotheudt ◽  
Mario Fleischer

AbstractIn this study, emission rates of aerosols emitted by professional singers were measured with a laser particle counter under cleanroom conditions. The emission rates during singing varied between 753 and 6093 particles/sec with a median of 1537 particles/sec. Emission rates for singing were compared with data for breathing and speaking. Significantly higher emission rates were found for singing. The emission enhancements between singing and speaking were between 4.0 and 99.5 with a median of 17.4, largely due to higher sound pressure levels when singing. Further, significant effects of vocal loudness were found, whereas there were no significant differences between the investigated voice classifications. The present study supports the efforts to improve the risk management in cases of possible aerogenic virus transmission, especially for choir singing.


10.31022/b010 ◽  
1970 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Marie Leclair
Keyword(s):  

Leclair's opus 9 sonatas are some of Leclair's most technically advanced works for violin and continuo.


Notes ◽  
1950 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 625
Author(s):  
Vincent Duckles ◽  
Giovanni Gabrieli ◽  
Soren Sorensen ◽  
Giovanni Legrenzi
Keyword(s):  

1969 ◽  
Vol L (3) ◽  
pp. 429-b-430
Author(s):  
JERZY GOLOS
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bernhard Richter ◽  
Anna Maria Hipp ◽  
Bernd Schubert ◽  
Marcus Rudolf Axt ◽  
Markus Stratmann ◽  
...  

Since the Covid-19 virus spreads through airborne transmission, questions concerning the risk of spreading infectious droplets during singing and music making arose. To contribute to this question and to help clarify the possible risks, we analyzed 15 singing scenarios (1) qualitative, by making airflows visible, while singing, and (2) quantitative, by measuring air velocities in three distances (1m, 1.5m and 2m). Air movements were considered positive, when lying above 0.1 m/s, which is the usual room air velocity in venue, such as the concert hall of the Bamberg Symphony, where our measurements with three professional singers (female classical style, male classic style, female popular music styles) took place. Our findings highlight, that high measurements for respiratory air velocity while singing, are comparable to measurements of speaking and, by far, less than coughing. All measurements for singing stayed within a reach of 1.5m, only direct voiceless blowing achieved measurements at the 2m sensor. Singing styles, which use plosive sounds i.e. consonants more often, such as rap, produced the highest air velocities of 0.17 m/s at the 1m sensor. Also, singing, while wearing a facemask, produces no air movements over 0.1 m/s. On the basis of, our recent studies on measurements of airflows and air velocities of professional singers and wind instrument players, as well as further studies on CO2; measurements in room settings of music activities, we publish our results, in consideration of further up-to-date research, in our frequently updated risk assessment (first published in April 2020). On this behalf, we suggest 2m radial distances for singers, especially in choirs.


Daphnis ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 45 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 250-273
Author(s):  
Elena Nendza

The Massacre of the Innocents of Matthew 2,16–18 is a famous motif of Early Modern European art and transcends borders of genre and confession. This article explores an example of its cross-confessional use looking at the sacred poem La Strage degli Innocenti (1632) by Italian poet Giambattista Marino, its German adaptation Verdeutschter Bethlehemitischer Kinder-Mord (1715) by Hamburg Protestant poet Barthold Heinrich Brockes and the influence of paintings from the Dutch milieu. Die biblische Episode des Bethlehemitischen Kindermordes aus Matthäus 2,16-18, ist ein prominentes und überaus beliebtes Motiv der frühneuzeitlichen Künste in Europa. Sein Erfolg ist derart groß, dass bei seiner Rezeption nicht nur die verschiedenen Genres und Gattungen, sondern auch die Konfessionsgrenzen überwunden werden. Dieser Artikel untersucht einen fruchtbaren Austausch von Katholiken und Protestanten am Beispiel von zwei geistlichen Epen: La Strage degli Innocenti (1632) des italienischen Dichters Giambattista Marino sowie die deutsche Adapation Verdeutschter Bethlehemitischer Kinder-Mord (1715) des protestantischen Hamburger Dichters Barthold Heinrich Brockes. Bis heute jedoch ist das italienische Opus dem literarischen Kanon kaum bekannt, obgleich es inmitten der konfessionellen Auseinandersetzung zu einer kulturellen Schnittstellte Europas avanciert. Der folgende Beitrag diskutiert also nicht allein den interkonfessionellen Gebrauch des Motivs, sondern veranschaulicht darüber hinaus die kulturhistorische Relevanz von Marinos geistlichem Epos über den Vergleich mit Kindermord-Gemälden aus dem niederländischen Milieu.


Notes ◽  
1983 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. 158
Author(s):  
Albert Seay ◽  
G. F. Handel ◽  
David Lasocki ◽  
J. C. Schickhardt ◽  
Carl Maria von Weber ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

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