Examples
- madrigal (plural madrigals) (music) a song for a small number of unaccompanied voices; from 13th century Italy (music) a madrigal [edit] Declension. declension of madrigal. singular. plural. nominative. madrìgāl. madrigali. genitive. — “madrigal - Wiktionary”,
- Learn about the Italian and English madrigals. As poetry set to twelve lines, the madrigal was a popular Renaissance music form that was emotional, yet refined. — “Italian and English Madrigals of the 16th century”,
- The Davis High School Madrigals are an auditioned group of 32 high school sophomores, juniors and seniors from Davis, California, USA who perform a wide variety of music dating from the 15th century to the present. Formed in 1966, this highly. — “DHS Madrigal Singers”,
- A madrigal is a type of secular vocal music composition, written 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. — “The Classical Madrigal Information Page on Classic Cat”,
- Myspace Music profile for The Madrigals. Download The Madrigals Pop / Alternative / Folk music singles, watch music videos, listen to free streaming mp3s, & read The Madrigals's blog. — “The Madrigals on Myspace Music - Free Streaming MP3s”,
- Wilbye followed the example of Thomas Morley as a composer of madrigals, publishing collections of his work in 1598 and 1609 and contributing one madrigal to the 1601 collection in honour of Queen Elizabeth, The Triumphs of Oriana, the six-voice The Lady Oriana. — “Composer - John Wilbye at CD Universe”,
- madrigal n. A song for two or three unaccompanied voices, developed in Italy in the late 13th and early 14th centuries. — “madrigal: Definition from ”,
- Madrigal, in music, secular composition for two or more voices, introduced in Italy in the 14th century and revived in a different form during the 16th century, at which time it also became popular with English, French, German, and Spanish composers. — “Madrigals - Songbooks, sheet music, recordings, CDs and history”,
- If you have madrigals/authors which I have not. listed above that you'd like to see with it's carefully constructed finale is among my favourites in the English Madrigal genre. — “English Madrigals”,
- Definition of Madrigals in the Online Dictionary. Meaning of Madrigals. Pronunciation of Madrigals. Translations of Madrigals. Madrigals synonyms, Madrigals antonyms. Information about Madrigals in the free online English dictionary and. — “Madrigals - definition of Madrigals by the Free Online”,
- CD Baby is the largest online distributor of independent music. is our quaint little record store where we hope you will discover your next favorite artist. — “CDBaby | Classical | Madrigals”,
- Madrigals. Pep Club. Power of the Pen Creative Writing Competition Madrigals. 2010-2011. Mr. James Clark Walker, Director. Singers. Joshua Artis. Patrick Bias. Mitchell Chaffin. Noah Colley. Courtney Faul. — “Madrigals”, east.k12.oh.us
- Listen to Alfred Deller: Madrigals, Complete Deller Vol. 5 by Alfred Deller FREE on . Rhapsody lets you explore every style of music without paying per song. Play 25 songs a month for free, or listen to anything and everything in the. — “Alfred Deller: Madrigals, Complete Deller Vol. 5 by Alfred”,
- Three madrigals sheet music at Sheet Music Plus. — “Three madrigals sheet music - Sheet Music Plus”,
- Madrigals. Madrigals in the top level preforming group at Box Elder To tie in with the theme song, the Madrigal officers decided that we wanted to have another little theme. — “Box Elder High School”,
- Encyclopedia article about Madrigals. Information about Madrigals in the Columbia Encyclopedia, Computer Desktop Encyclopedia, computing dictionary. — “Madrigals definition of Madrigals in the Free Online Encyclopedia”, encyclopedia2
- 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. — “Madrigal (music) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia”,
- Search keyword (click for general results): "Madrigals, Book 5, Gesualdo" (MP3 albums (US only), general composer works) Madrigals, Book V, 5vv (Gesualdo, 1611) Composer. Gesualdo, Carlo. Number of Movements/Sections. 21. Year of First Publication. 1611. — “Madrigals, Book 5 (Gesualdo, Carlo) - IMSLP/Petrucci Music”,
- A madrigal is a setting for two or more voices of a secular text, often in Italian. The distribution of such artistic love songs through madrigals demonstrated the importance of true love and that living for the. — “Madrigal - New World Encyclopedia”,