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Madrigal)
A list of all pages categorized as madrigals on CPDL.
A madrigal is a type of secular vocal music composition, written during the Renaissance and early Baroque eras. Throughout most of its history it was polyphonic and unaccompanied by instruments, with the number of voices varying from two to eight, but most frequently three to six. The earliest examples of the genre date from Italy in the 1520s, and while the center of madrigal production remained in Italy, madrigals were also written in England and Germany, especially late in the 16th and early in the 17th centuries. Unlike many other strophic forms of the time, most madrigals are through-composed, with music being written to best express the sentiment of each line of a poetic text. The madrigal originated in part from the frottola, in part from the resurgence in interest in vernacular Italian poetry, and also from the influence of the French chanson and polyphonic style of the motet as written by the Franco-Flemish composers who had naturalized in Italy during the period. The madrigal is related mostly by name alone to the Italian trecento madrigal of the late 13th and 14th centuries.
The madrigal was the most important secular form of music of its time. It reached its fullest development in the second half of the 16th century, losing its importance in the early 17th century, when forms such as the solo song became more popular. After the 1630s it merged with the cantata and the dialogue, and the solo madrigal was replaced by the aria due to the rise of opera as an important genre.
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Pages in this category
The following 200 pages are in this category, out of 1,600 total.
A
- A che tormi il ben mio (Claudio Monteverdi)
- ¿A dónde vas, zagala? (Mateo Romero)
- A mi Tirsi (Giovanni Ghizzolo)
- A quanti già felici (Orlando di Lasso)
- A quest'olmo (Claudio Monteverdi)
- A silly sylvan, kissing heav'n-born fire (John Wilbye)
- A voi, mentre il mio core (Carlo Gesualdo)
- A voi, reali amanti (Cristoforo Malvezzi)
- About the maypole (Thomas Morley)
- Abradad: Alas you salt sea gods (Robert Parsons)
- L'Acceso (Giovanni Gastoldi)
- Accingetevi Amanti (Orazio Vecchi)
- Ach Elslein, liebes Elselein mein (Ludwig Senfl)
- Ach Schatz, ich sing und lache (Hans Leo Hassler)
- Ach Weh des Leiden (Andreas Rauch)
- Ach herzigs Herz (Heinrich Finck)
- Ad una fresca riva (Luca Marenzio)
- Adew, adew, my hartis lust (William Cornysh)
- Adieu, adieu you kind and cruel (Thomas Morley)
- Adieu, monde, puis qu'en toy (Guillaume Costeley)
- Adieu, sweet Amaryllis (John Wilbye)
- Adieu, ye city pris'ning towers (Thomas Tomkins)
- Aegra (Orlando di Lasso)
- Affliti spirti mei (Philippe Verdelot)
- Afflitti spirti miei (Costanzo Festa)
- Affrettiamoci tutti di fruire (Orazio Vecchi)
- Agwillare habeth standiff (Anonymous)
- ¡Ah Pelayo, que desmayo! (Anonymous)
- Ah che non si conviene (Claudio Monteverdi)
- Ah che vuoi più cruciar m'amor (Costanzo Festa)
- Ah sweet, alas! when first I saw (George Kirbye)
- Ah! cannot sighs nor tears (John Wilbye)
- Ah! cruel Amarillis (John Wilbye)
- Ah! dolente partita (Claudio Monteverdi)
- Ah, Cupid grant that I may never see (Thomas Bateson)
- Ah, Robin, gentle Robin (William Cornysh)
- Ah, alas, you salt sea gods (Richard Farrant)
- Ah, cruel hateful fortune (George Kirbye)
- Ah, dear heart, why do you rise? (Orlando Gibbons)
- Ahi caro mio tesoro (Giovanni Domenico da Nola)
- Ahi che debbo morire (Giovanni Maria Nanino)
- Ahi chi mi romp'il sonno (Philippe de Monte)
- Ahi se la donna mia (Jacques Arcadelt)
- Ahi, che non pur risponde (Claudio Monteverdi)
- Ahi, che quest' occhi miei (Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina)
- Ahi, disperata vita (Carlo Gesualdo)
- Ahi, dispietata morte! (Luca Marenzio)
- Ahime che co'l partir (Giovanni Domenico da Nola)
- Ahimè dov'è'l bel viso (Jacques Arcadelt)
- Al bel de tuoi capelli (Orazio Vecchi)
- Al dì, dolce ben mio (Filippo Azzaiolo)
- Al lume delle stelle (Claudio Monteverdi)
- Al mio gioir il ciel si fa sereno (Carlo Gesualdo)
- Al mormorar dei liquidi cristalli (Giovanni Gastoldi)
- Al primo vostro sguardo (Luca Marenzio)
- Alas! What a wretched life (John Wilbye)
- Alas! what hope of speeding (George Kirbye)
- Alas, what hope of speeding (John Wilbye)
- Alcun non mi consigli (Claudio Monteverdi)
- Alcun non può saper (Giovanni Maria Nanino)
- Ale and Tobacco (Thomas Ravenscroft)
- All Lust und Freud (Hans Leo Hassler)
- All at once well met (Thomas Weelkes)
- All creatures now are merry-minded (John Bennet)
- All pleasure is of this condition (John Wilbye)
- All' apparir dell' alba (Cornelio Antonelli da Rimini)
- All' arm' all' arme (Lodovico Agostini)
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A cont.
- Alla riva del Tebro (Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina)
- Allala pia calia (Orlando di Lasso)
- Alma afflitta, SWV 4 (Heinrich Schütz)
- Alma ben nata (Philippe de Monte)
- Alma del core (Antonio Caldara)
- Alma perchè t'affliggi? (Giacomo Gorzanis)
- Alme d'Amor rubelle (Carlo Gesualdo)
- Altri canti d'Amor, tenero arciero (Claudio Monteverdi)
- Altri canti di Marte / Due belli occhi (Claudio Monteverdi)
- L'amante modesto (Barbara Strozzi)
- Gl'Amanti cantano un madrigale (No. 8 from 'Festino') (Adriano Banchieri)
- Gli amanti cantano una canzonetta (No. 9 from 'Festino') (Adriano Banchieri)
- Gl' Amanti moreschano (No. 7 from 'Festino') (Adriano Banchieri)
- Amarilli, mia bella (Giulio Caccini)
- L'amata ninfa mia (Giovanni Maria Nanino)
- Amatemi ben mio (Luca Marenzio)
- Among the Daffadillies (Giles Farnaby)
- Amor Vittorioso (Giovanni Gastoldi)
- Amor che deggio far (Claudio Monteverdi)
- Amor dove mi guidi à 12 voci (Giovanni Gabrieli)
- Amor e'l versu meco (Giovanni de Macque)
- Amor io sento (Giovanni de Macque)
- Amor lasciami stare (Cornelio Antonelli da Rimini)
- Amor m'ha fato deventar fenice (Giovanni Domenico da Nola)
- Amor opra che puoi (Orazio Vecchi)
- Amor se d'hor in hor (Philippe Verdelot)
- Amor sia benedetto (Cornelio Antonelli da Rimini)
- Amor è ritornato (Luca Marenzio)
- Amor, io sento l'alma (Philippe Verdelot)
- Amor, per tua mercè (Mogens Pedersøn)
- Amore, che sospirar mi fai (Alexander Agricola)
- Amorosi pensieri (Philippe de Monte)
- Amoroso pastorello (Giovanni Ghizzolo)
- Amyntas with his Phyllis fair (Francis Pilkington)
- An hellen Tagen (Giovanni Gastoldi)
- Ancide sol la morte (Carlo Gesualdo)
- Ancor che col partire (Cipriano de Rore)
- Ancor che per amarti (Carlo Gesualdo)
- And must I needs depart then? (Thomas Bateson)
- And though my love abounding (John Wilbye)
- The Andalusian merchant (Thomas Weelkes)
- Angelica biltà (Francesco Landini)
- Anima del cor (Claudio Monteverdi)
- Anima dolorosa (Claudio Monteverdi)
- Anima dove vai (Philippe de Monte)
- April is in my mistress' face (Thomas Morley)
- Arde il mio cor (Carlo Gesualdo)
- Ardita Zanzaretta (Carlo Gesualdo)
- Ardo (Bartolomeo Spighi da Prato)
- Ardo e scoprir, ahi lasso, io non ardisco (Claudio Monteverdi)
- Ardo per te, mio bene (Carlo Gesualdo)
- Ardo, avvampo, mi struggo, ardo: accorrete (Claudio Monteverdi)
- Arise, awake (Thomas Morley)
- Arise, get up my dear (Thomas Morley)
- Armato il cor d'adamantina fede (Claudio Monteverdi)
- Arousez voz violier (Benedictus Appenzeller)
- Arsi un tempo (Alessandro Scarlatti)
- Artifex mirus / Erano i capei d'or (Giovanni Maria Nanino)
- As Flora slept (John Hilton (the younger))
- As Vesta was from Latmos hill descending (Thomas Weelkes)
- As deadly serpents lurking (Thomas Weelkes)
- As fair as morn (John Wilbye)
- As matchless beauty (John Wilbye)
- Asciugate i begli occhi (Carlo Gesualdo)
- Asia felice (Andrea Gabrieli)
- Asiso sovra un sasso (Rinaldo del Mel)
- Au joly bois (Johannes Lupi)
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A cont.
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