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- Madrigale_spirituale abstract "A madrigale spirituale (Italian; pl. madrigali spirituali) is a madrigal, or madrigal-like piece of music, with a sacred rather than a secular text. Most examples of the form date from the late Renaissance and early Baroque eras, and principally come from Italy and Germany.Madrigali spirituali were almost always intended for an audience of cultivated, often aristocratic amateurs. They were performed at private houses, academies, and courts of noblemen in Italy and adjacent countries, but almost certainly were not used liturgically. The madrigale spirituale was an a cappella form, though instrumental accompaniment was used on occasion, especially after 1600.During the Counter-Reformation, there was to some degree a reaction against the secularization of the art of music in Italy, Spain and the southern (Catholic) portion of Germany. While this did not stop the composition of secular music—indeed the explosion of forms and styles of secular music continued unabated—many composers began to adapt the most advanced secular compositional forms to religious usage. On occasion, existing madrigals were merely fitted with a religious text, usually in Latin, without any other change (such adaptations are called "contrafacta"). But some of the madrigali spirituali reached heights of expressive and emotional intensity at least equal to that of the finest madrigalists in their secular compositions.The form was probably encouraged by the Jesuits; some collections were dedicated to them, especially in the 1570s and 1580s.Some famous examples of madrigali spirituali include Lassus's sublimely beautiful Lagrime di San Pietro (Munich, 1595); Guillaume Dufay's Vergine bella, (ca. 1470) setting a poem in praise of the Blessed Virgin Mary by Petrarch; Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina's First Book of Madrigals (1581), also setting Marian poems by Petrarch; Carlo Gesualdo's Tenebrae Responsories (1611); and the huge collection by Giovanni Francesco Anerio, Teatro armonico spirituale (Rome, 1619).".
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageID "802152".
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageLength "2660".
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageOutDegree "24".
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageRevisionID "556677980".
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLink A_cappella.
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLink Baroque_music.
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLink Blessed_Virgin_Mary.
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLink Carlo_Gesualdo.
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLink Category:Catholic_music.
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLink Category:Madrigals.
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLink Catholic_Church.
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLink Counter-Reformation.
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLink Germany.
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLink Giovanni_Francesco_Anerio.
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLink Giovanni_Pierluigi_da_Palestrina.
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLink Guillaume_Dufay.
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLink Gustave_Reese.
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLink Italy.
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLink Jesuit.
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLink Lagrime_di_San_Pietro.
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLink Madrigal.
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLink Madrigal_(music).
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLink Motet.
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLink Munich.
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLink Orlande_de_Lassus.
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLink Petrarch.
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLink Renaissance_music.
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLink Responsories_for_Holy_Week.
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLink Roman_Catholic_Church.
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLink Society_of_Jesus.
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLink Spain.
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLink Tenebrae_Responsories.
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLink Veneration_of_Mary_in_Roman_Catholicism.
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLinkText "Madrigale spirituale".
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLinkText "Madrigali Spirituali".
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLinkText "madrigale spirituale".
- Madrigale_spirituale wikiPageWikiLinkText "madrigali spirituali".
- Madrigale_spirituale hasPhotoCollection Madrigale_spirituale.
- Madrigale_spirituale subject Category:Catholic_music.
- Madrigale_spirituale subject Category:Madrigals.
- Madrigale_spirituale hypernym Madrigal.
- Madrigale_spirituale type Composition.
- Madrigale_spirituale comment "A madrigale spirituale (Italian; pl. madrigali spirituali) is a madrigal, or madrigal-like piece of music, with a sacred rather than a secular text. Most examples of the form date from the late Renaissance and early Baroque eras, and principally come from Italy and Germany.Madrigali spirituali were almost always intended for an audience of cultivated, often aristocratic amateurs.".
- Madrigale_spirituale label "Madrigale spirituale".
- Madrigale_spirituale sameAs Madrigale_spirituale.
- Madrigale_spirituale sameAs Madrigali_spirituali.
- Madrigale_spirituale sameAs m.03d45f.
- Madrigale_spirituale sameAs Q3842899.
- Madrigale_spirituale sameAs Q3842899.
- Madrigale_spirituale wasDerivedFrom Madrigale_spirituale?oldid=556677980.
- Madrigale_spirituale isPrimaryTopicOf Madrigale_spirituale.