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. A
frottola generally would consist of music set to stanzas of text,
while madrigals were through-composed. However, some of the same
poems were used for both frottola and madrigals. The poetry of
Petrarch in particular shows up in a wide variety of genres. 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 because of the rise of
opera as an important genre.
History
Origins and early madrigals
In the early 16th century, several humanistic trends converged
which allowed the madrigal to form. First, there was a reawakened
interest in use of
Italian as a
vernacular language. Poet and literary theorist
Pietro Bembo edited an edition of
Petrarch, the great 14th century poet, in 1501, and
later published his theories on how contemporary poets could attain
excellence by imitating Petrarch, and by being carefully attentive
to the exact sounds of words, as well as their positioning within
lines. The poetic form of the madrigal, which consisted of an
irregular number of lines of usually 7 or 11 syllables, without
repetition, and usually on a serious topic, came into being as a
result of Bembo's influence.
Second, Italy had long been a destination for the superbly-trained
composers of the
Franco-Flemish
school, who were attracted by the culture as well as the
employment opportunities at the aristocratic courts and
ecclesiastical institutions – Italy was, after all, the center of
the
Roman Catholic Church, the
single most important cultural institution in Europe. These
composers had mastered a serious
polyphonic style suitable for setting sacred
music, and also were familiar with the secular music of their
homelands, music such as the
chanson, which
differed considerably from the lighter Italian secular styles of
the late 15th and very early 16th centuries.
Third, printed secular music had become widely available in Italy
due to the recent invention of
moveable
type and the
printing press. The
music being written and sung, principally the
frottola but also the
ballata,
canzonetta, and
mascherata, was light, and typically used
verses of relatively low literary quality. These popular music
styles used repetition and soprano-dominated
chordal textures, styles considerably more simple
than those used by most of the resident composers of the
Franco-Flemish school. Literary tastes were changing, and the more
serious verse of Bembo and his school needed a means of musical
expression more flexible and open than was available in the
frottola and its related forms.
The first madrigals were written in Florence, either by native
Florentines or by Franco-Flemish musicians in the employ of the
Medici. The madrigal did not replace the
frottola right away; during the transitional decade of the 1520s,
both frottole and madrigals (though not yet in name) were written
and published. The earliest madrigals were probably those by
Bernardo Pisano, in his 1520
Musica di messer Bernardo Pisano sopra le canzone del
Petrarcha, which was also the first secular music collection
ever printed containing only the works of a single composer. While
none of the pieces in the collection use the name "madrigal", some
of the compositions are settings of Petrarch, and the music
carefully observes word placement and accent, and even contains
word-painting, a feature which was to
become characteristic of the later madrigal.
The first
book of madrigals labeled as such was the Madrigali de diversi
musici: libro primo de la Serena of Philippe Verdelot, published in 1530 in
Rome
. Verdelot, a French
composer,
had written the pieces in the late 1520s, while he lived in
Florence
. He
included music by both
Sebastiano
and
Costanzo Festa, as well as
Maistre Jhan of Ferrara, in addition to
his own music. In 1533 and 1534 he published two books of four
voice madrigals in Venice; these were to become extremely popular,
and indeed they were, in their 1540 reprint, one of the most widely
printed and distributed music books of the first half of the 16th
century. They sold so well that Adrian Willaert made arrangements
of some of these works for single voice and lute in 1536. Verdelot
published madrigals for five and six voices as well, with the
collection for six voices appearing in 1541.
Particularly popular was the first collection of madrigals by
Jacques Arcadelt. Originally
published in Venice, in 1539, it was reprinted throughout Europe
for many years after, becoming the most often reprinted madrigal
book of the entire era. Stylistically, the music in both Arcadelt's
and Verdelot's books was more akin to the French chanson than
either the Italian frottola or the sacred music of the time, such
as the
motet. This may be unsurprising
considering that the native language of both Arcadelt and Verdelot
was French, and both had written chansons themselves when in their
homeland; however, they were carefully attentive to text setting,
in keeping with the ideas of Bembo, and they through-composed the
music, writing new music for each line of text, rather than using
the refrain and verse constructions that were common in French
secular music.
Mid-century madrigal
While the madrigal was born in Florence and Rome, by mid-century
the centers of musical activity had moved to Venice and other
cities. The mercenaries of
Charles V sacked Rome in 1527,
and a period of related political turmoil in Florence, culminating
in the
Siege of
Florence (1529-30), in which Verdelot himself may have
perished, reduced that city's significance as a musical center.
In
addition, Venice was Europe's center of music publishing; the grand
Basilica of St.
Mark's
was just beginning the period in which it attracted
musicians from all over Europe; and Pietro Bembo himself had
returned to Venice in 1529. Adrian Willaert and his associates at St.
Mark's – younger men such as
Girolamo
Parabosco,
Jacques Buus,
Baldassare Donato,
Perissone Cambio, and
Cipriano de Rore – were the primary
representatives of madrigal composition at mid-century. Willaert
preferred more complex textures to Arcadelt and Verdelot; often his
madrigals were similar to motets, with their polyphonic language,
although he varied texture between homophonic and polyphonic
passages as necessary to highlight the text. For verse he used
Petrarch in preference to Petrarch's 16th-century imitators; many
of his madrigals set Petrarch's sonnets.
Cipriano de Rore was the most
influential of the mid-century madrigalists after Willaert. While
Willaert was restrained and subtle in his text setting, striving
more for homogeneity than sharp contrast, Rore was one to
experiment. He used extravagant rhetorical gestures, including
word-painting and unusual
chromatic
relationships, a trend encouraged by visionary music theorist
Nicola Vicentino. It was from
Rore's musical language that "madrigalisms", so distinctive of the
genre, first came about; and it was also with Rore that five-voice
texture became the standard.
The madrigal from the 1550s to the 1570s
The later history of the madrigal begins with Rore. All of the
different trends in madrigal composition, which by the early 17th
century had diverged into many different forms, are present in
embryonic form in Rore's enormously influential output.
Many thousands of madrigals were written in Italy in the 1550s; the
entire repertoire is yet to be studied exhaustively. Some famous
names of the period, besides Rore, are Palestrina, who wrote some
secular music early in his career; the young
Orlande de Lassus, who wrote many
well-known examples, including the highly experimental and
chromatic
Prophetiae
Sibyllarum, and who, on moving to Munich in 1556, began
the history of madrigal composition outside of Italy; and
Philippe de Monte, the most prolific of
all madrigal composers, whose first publication dates from 1554. In
style, the madrigals of the 1550s varied from the conservative and
elegant style of Palestrina and some of the others working in Rome,
to the highly chromatic and expressive work by Lassus, Rore, and
others working in the cities of northern Italy.
Luca Marenzio, a highly influential composer of madrigals in the
last two decades of the sixteenth century
Late in the 16th century, while "classic" madrigals continued to be
written throughout Italy, different styles of madrigal composition
developed somewhat independently in different geographic areas. In
Venice, composers such as
Andrea
Gabrieli continued to write madrigals in the classic tradition,
but with the bright, open, polyphonic textures for which he was
famous in his motets and other works. At the court of Ferrara, the
presence of three uniquely gifted female singers – the
concerto delle donne – attracted a
group of composers who wrote highly ornamented madrigals, often
with instrumental accompaniment, to be performed by members of this
group. These composers included
Luzzasco Luzzaschi,
Giaches de Wert, and
Lodovico Agostini, but the fame of the
group was so widespread that many composers visited Ferrara both to
hear and write for them, and in some cases founded similar groups
of their own in other cities (for example, the Medici attempted to
imitate the group in Florence, and had
Alessandro Striggio write madrigals in a
style like Luzzaschi's). Rome, the ostensibly conservative center
of the Roman Catholic Church, was itself the home of one of the
most famous madrigal composers of the era,
Luca Marenzio. Marenzio came closest to
unifying all the different stylistic currents of the time, writing
madrigals which attempted to capture every nuance of emotion in the
poems using every musical means then available. Marenzio wrote over
400 madrigals during his short life.
Yet another trend in madrigal composition after mid-century was the
re-incorporation of lighter elements into the form, which had been
predominantly a serious genre since its inception. Where verse by
Petrarch had been the standard, and themes of love and longing and
death had been typical, by the 1560s composers had begun bringing
back elements of some lighter Italian forms, such as the
villanella, with their dancelike rhythms and
verses on carefree subjects. Some of the composers who wrote in
this manner included
Marc'Antonio
Ingegneri, the teacher of Monteverdi,
Andrea Gabrieli, and
Giovanni Ferretti. The
canzonetta was a specific offshoot of the
madrigal in this vein.
Especially during the late 16th century, composers were ingenious
in their use of so-called "
madrigalisms" —
passages in which the music assigned to a particular word expresses
its meaning, for example, setting
riso (smile) to a
passage of quick, running notes which imitate laughter, or
sospiro (sigh) to a note which falls to the note below.
This technique is also known as "
word-painting." While it originated in secular
music, it made its way into other vocal music of the period. While
this mannerism is a prominent feature of madrigals of the late 16th
century, including both Italian and English, it encountered sharp
criticism from some composers.
Thomas
Campion, writing in the preface to his first book of
lute songs 1601, said of it: "... where the nature
of everie word is precisely expresst in the Note ... such childish
observing of words is altogether ridiculous."
The madrigal at the end of the 16th century
The change in the social function of the madrigal at the end of the
16th century contributed to its development into new dramatic
forms. Since its invention, it had served two principal roles: as a
pleasant private entertainment for small groups of skilled amateur
musicians; and as an adjunct to large ceremonial public
performances. The first use, the private one, was by far the most
common throughout the life of the madrigal, and it was through
these enthusiastic gatherings of amateurs that the madrigal
acquired its fame. However, in the last two decades of the century,
virtuoso professional singers began to replace amateurs, and
composers wrote music for them of greater dramatic force. Not only
was this music harder to sing, but the sentiments expressed tended
to require soloists rather than equal members of an ensemble in
order to be dramatically convincing. Also during this period a
division between performers and passive audiences – not the large
audiences present at a public ceremonial spectacle, as seen earlier
in the century, but relatively small, intimate gatherings, with
performers and listeners, a situation recognizably modern – began
to be seen, especially in such progressive cultural centers as
Ferrara and Mantua. Much of what was once expressed in a madrigal
in 1590, could twenty years later be expressed by an
aria in the new form of opera; however, the madrigal
continued to live on into the 17th century, in several forms,
including old-style madrigals for many voices; a solo form with
instrumental accompaniment; and the concertato madrigal, of which
Claudio Monteverdi was the most famous practitioner.
Naples was the home of the notoriously murderous nobleman
Carlo Gesualdo, who not only killed his wife
and her lover
in flagrante
delicto but wrote some of the most extravagantly
expressive and harmonically experimental music prior to the 19th
century. Gesualdo's style followed directly from Luzzaschi's, and
he named the older composer as his mentor: the two worked together
at Ferrara in the early 1590s, giving Gesualdo ample opportunity to
absorb the chromaticism and textural contrasts of the Ferrarese,
including Luzzaschi and
Alfonso
Fontanelli. Gesualdo published six books of madrigals during
his lifetime, as well as some sacred music in madrigalian style
(for example the
Tenebrae Responsories of 1611). No one
followed Gesualdo down this path of
mannerism and extreme chromaticism, although
composers such as
Antonio Cifra,
Sigismondo d'India, and
Domenico Mazzocchi selectively used some
of his techniques.
Monteverdi; transition to the "concerted" madrigal
Of all the composers of madrigals of the late 16th century, none
was as central a figure as
Claudio
Monteverdi, who was often credited as the principal actor in
the transition from Renaissance music to Baroque music. In his long
career, he wrote nine books of madrigals, which showed the
transition from the late 16th-century polyphonic style to the
monodic and
concertato style, accompanied by basso continuo,
of the early Baroque. As expressive as Gesualdo, he avoided the
extremes of chromaticism employed by that composer and instead
focused on the dramatic possibilities inherent in the form. His
fifth and sixth books include not only polyphonic madrigals for
equal voices in the manner of the late 16th century, but also
madrigals with parts for solo voice accompanied by continuo;
additionally these works make use of unprepared dissonances and
recitative-like passages, foreshadowing the eventual absorption of
the solo madrigal into the aria. These madrigals also show the
influence of
monody, developing at the same
time: Manfred Bukofzer called the development of the
recitative-like 'stile rappresentativo' around 1600 as "the most
important turning point in the entire history of music." To
Monteverdi the words must be "the mistress of the harmony", and he
explained this doctrine in his preface to his Fifth Book of
Madrigals with his coinage of the term 'seconda pratica', in
response to the fierce criticism of
Giovanni Artusi, who defended the polyphonic
style of the 16th century with its controlled dissonance and equal
voice parts, and attacked the "barbaric" new style.
After 1600: the "concerted madrigal"
During the first decade of the 17th century the madrigal moved away
from the old ideal of an
a cappella vocal composition for
equally balanced voices, into a piece for one or more voices with
instrumental accompaniment. The soprano and bass line became more
important to the texture than the inner voices, if they existed at
all as independent parts; functional tonality began to develop;
composers treated dissonance more freely than before; and dramatic
contrasts between groupings of voices and instruments became
increasingly common. In the 17th century madrigal, two separate
trends can be identified: the solo madrigal, which involved a solo
voice with basso continuo, and madrigals for two or more voices,
also with basso continuo. In addition, some composers continued to
write ensemble madrigals in the older style, especially in
England.While the harmonic and dramatic changes in the madrigal
around 1600 may seem abrupt, the addition of instruments was not a
new thing. Instrumental performance of madrigals had already been
widespread for much of the 16th century, either in arrangements or
in performances mixed with singers. As madrigals had originally
been largely designed for performance by groups of talented
amateurs, without a passive audience, instruments were also
commonly used to fill in for missing parts. Instrumentation during
the period was rarely specified; indeed Monteverdi indicated in his
fifth and sixth book of madrigals that the
basso seguente,
the instrumental bass part, was optional in the ensemble madrigals.
The most commonly used instruments for playing the bass line and
filling in any inner parts, at this time, were the
lute,
theorbo,
chitarrone, and
harpsichord.
One of the prominent composers of madrigals in the solo with
continuo style, related to monody and descended directly from the
experimental music of the
Florentine
Camerata, was
Giulio Caccini, who
published the first collection of solo madrigals with his
Le
nuove musiche in 1601/2. The point was anti-contrapuntal:
Caccini and the Camerata believed that the words needed to be heard
above all else, and polyphonic, evenly balanced voices easily
obscured intelligibility. After Caccini, composers such as
Marco da Gagliano,
Sigismondo d'India, and
Claudio Saracini published collections of
their own; while Caccini's music was almost entirely diatonic, some
of these later composers, particular d'India, wrote their solo
madrigals in a more experimental chromatic idiom. Monteverdi
himself wrote only one solo madrigal, which he published in his
Seventh Book of Madrigals in 1619. While it uses only one singing
voice, it employs three separate groups of instruments – a
considerable advance from the simple voice and basso continuo
compositions of Caccini at the turn of the century.
Solo madrigals in the monodic style began to go out of fashion
shortly before 1620, to be replaced by the aria. The last book of
solo madrigals which did not contain any arias appeared in 1618;
that was also the first year in which a group of arias was
published which contained no madrigals. After that date arias
outnumbered madrigals, and both Saracini and d'India, previously
prolific composers of solo madrigals, ceased publishing them in the
early 1620s.
Two collections of the late 1630s serve as a summation of late
madrigal practice.
Domenico
Mazzocchi's 1638 book splits madrigals into continuo and
ensemble works specifically intended to be performed
a
cappella; Mazzocchi's instructions are precise, and he even
includes, for the first time in any printed music collection,
symbols for crescendo and decrescendo. However, these madrigals
were not intended for performance so much as study, and as such
show that the form was being viewed in retrospect. Monteverdi's
Book Eight, of the same year, contains some of the most famous
madrigals of the entire epoch, including the enormous
Combattimento di Tancredi e Clorinda, a dramatic
composition much like a secular oratorio. Among other innovations
in this work is the
stile concitato – the "stile of
agitation", which uses, among other things, string tremolo. The
pieces in Monteverdi's Book Eight, written over at least two
decades, show just about every development in the madrigal since
1600.
Eventually the madrigal vanished as an independent form. The solo
madrigal was supplanted by the aria and solo cantata; the ensemble
madrigal by the cantata and dialogue. By 1640 few madrigals were
still being published, and opera had become the predominant
dramatic musical form.
English madrigal school
In
England
, the madrigal became hugely popular after the
publication of Nicholas Yonge's
Musica Transalpina in 1588, a collection of Italian
madrigals fitted with English translations; this publication
initiated an entire school of madrigal composition in
England. The unaccompanied madrigal survived longer in
England than in the rest of
Europe. There,
composers continued to produce works in the late-16th century style
of the genre after the form had gone out of fashion on the
Continent.
Madrigals elsewhere in Europe
Madrigals influenced secular music in many other parts of Europe,
and in some areas composers wrote actual madrigals, either in
Italian or in their own languages. The amount of influence was
roughly inversely proportional to the strength of the local secular
musical tradition: for example France, which had the robust and
sophisticated form of the chanson during the 16th century, never
adopted the madrigal – they didn't need it. However some French
composers, especially those who had been to Italy, used madrigalian
techniques in their writing. These composers included cosmopolitan
figures such as
Orlande de Lassus,
who wrote in at least four languages, as well as Frenchmen such as
Claude Le Jeune.
The Netherlands was a major center of music publishing, and since
Italian madrigals were easily available from publishing houses,
some native composers wrote works either in influence or imitation.
Cornelis Verdonck,
Hubert Waelrant, and
Jan Pieterszoon Sweelinck all
composed madrigals in Italian.
Germany was the home of several prolific composers of madrigals,
including Lassus (in Munich) and
Philippe de Monte (Vienna), the most
prolific madrigal composer of all. Many Germans had gone south to
study in Italy, particularly with the Venetians;
Hans Leo Hassler studied with
Andrea Gabrieli, and
Heinrich Schütz with Monteverdi. Each
brought back to Germany what they learned, and wrote madrigals or
madrigalian pieces both in Italian and German. Musicians from the
courts of Denmark and Poland also studied the Italian style either
in their home countries or in Italy; Marenzio himself had worked in
Poland near the end of his life.
Madrigals after the 17th century
In early 18th century England, singing of madrigals was revived by
catch and glee clubs, and later by the
formation of the
Madrigal Society
in 1741, which still meets today. As a result of the printing and
singing of madrigals, particularly English ones, the madrigal
became the best-known form of Renaissance secular music in England
in the 19th century, even before the rediscovery of works by
composers such as
Palestrina.
Choral groups continue to sing madrigals to the present day; in the
United States they are particularly popular with high school and
college groups. In the U.S., madrigal choirs often sing in the
context of a
madrigal dinner which
may also include a play, Renaissance costumes, and instrumental
chamber music. The focus is generally
on the repertoire of the
English
Madrigal School.
Madrigal composers
Early composers of madrigals
The classic madrigal composers
The late madrigalists
Composers of Baroque madrigals
For either solo voice or vocal ensemble, but always with basso
continuo and often groups of other instruments:
Italy
Germany
English madrigal school
Some 60 madrigals of the English School are published in
The Oxford Book of English
Madrigals
Contemporary
Musical examples
- Stage 1 Madrigal: Arcadelt, Ahime, dov'e bel viso,
1538
- Stage 2 Madrigal (prima practica): Willaert, Aspro core e
selvaggio, mid 1540s
- Stage 3 Madrigal (seconda practica): Gesualdo, Io parto e
non piu dissi, 1590-1611
- Stage 4 Madrigal: Caccini, Perfidissimo volto,
1602
- Stage 5 Madrigal: Monteverdi, Il Combatimento di Tancredi
et Clorinda, 1624
- English Madrigal: Weelkes, O Care, thou wilt despatch
me, late 1500s/early 1600s
- Nineteenth century imitation of an English Madrigal: "Brightly
dawns our wedding day" from the Gilbert and Sullivan comic opera, The Mikado
(1885)
Media
References
- James Haar, Anthony Newcomb, Massimo Ossi, Glenn Watkins, Nigel
Fortune, Joseph Kerman, Jerome Roche: "Madrigal", Grove Music
Online, ed. L. Macy (Accessed December 30, 2007), (subscription
access)
- Kurt von Fischer et al.: "Madrigal", Grove Music Online, ed. L.
Macy (Accessed November 30, 2008) (subscription
access)
- James Haar, Anthony Newcomb, Glenn Watkins, Nigel Fortune,
Joseph Kerman, Jerome Roche: "Madrigal", in The New Grove
Dictionary of Music and Musicians, ed. Stanley Sadie. 20 vol.
London, Macmillan Publishers Ltd., 1980. ISBN 1561591742
- Denis Arnold, Emma Wakelin. "Madrigal." In The Oxford
Companion to Music, edited by Alison Latham. Oxford Music
Online,
http://www.oxfordmusiconline.com/subscriber/article/opr/t114/e4142
(accessed November 28, 2008).
- Gustave Reese, Music in the
Renaissance. New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1954. ISBN
0393095304
- Alfred Einstein, The Italian Madrigal. Three volumes.
Princeton, New Jersey, Princeton University Press, 1949. ISBN
0-691-09112-9
- Allan W. Atlas, Renaissance Music: Music in Western Europe,
1400–1600. New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1998. ISBN
0-393-97169-4
- Howard Mayer Brown, Music in the Renaissance. Prentice
Hall History of Music Series. Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey;
Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1976. ISBN 0-13-608497-4
- The New Harvard Dictionary of Music, ed. Don Randel.
Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press, 1986. ISBN
0674615255
- Giovanni Artusi, Della imperfezioni della moderna
musica, tr. Oliver Strunk, in Source Readings in Music
History. New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1950.
Notes
- Brown, pg. 198
- Brown, pg. 198
- James Haar, Anthony Newcomb: Grove online
- Massimo Ossi, Grove online
- James Haar, Anthony Newcomb: Grove online
- Atlas, p. 433
- Brown, p. 221
- James Haar, Anthony Newcomb: Grove online
- James Haar, Anthony Newcomb: Grove online
- James Haar, Anthony Newcomb: Grove online
- James Haar, Anthony Newcomb, Grove (1980)
- Harvard Dictionary of Music, p. 463
- Atlas, p. 431-432
- Atlas, 432ff
- Brown, 221-224
- Brown, p. 224-5
- Einstein, Vol. I, p. 391
- Brown, p. 228
- Reese, p. 406
- Newcomb, 1980, pp. 54-55
- Atlas, pp.636-638
- Thomas Campion, First Booke of Ayres (1601), quoted in
von Fischer, Grove online
- Einstein, Vol II, p. 688ff
- Bianconi, Carlo Gesualdo, Grove online
- Einstein, Vol II, p.867-71
- Bukofzer, p. 25
- Arnold/Wakelin
- Artusi, in Strunck, p. 395
- von Fischer , et al., Grove online
- von Fischer, et al., Grove online
- von Fischer, et al., Grove online
- Haar, Grove (1980)
- Bukofzer, p. 37
- Bukofzer, p. 38
- von Fischer, Grove online
- von Fischer et al., Grove online
External links