- The
frottola (pronounced [ˈfrɔttola];
plural frottole) was the
predominant type of
Italian po****r
secular song of the late
fifteenth and
early sixteenth...
-
composer of the
middle Renaissance. He is
mainly famous as a
composer of
frottole; he is prin****lly
infamous for
murdering his wife. He was born in Verona...
-
Loyset Compère (c. 1445 – 16
August 1518) was a Franco-Flemish
composer of the Renaissance. Of the same
generation as
Josquin des Prez, he was one of the...
- his time,
writing in
genres that
included m****es, motets,
chansons and
frottole. Much of his
output is
sacred music, in
which he
cultivated and developed...
-
light secular form of the frottola, an
ancestor of the madrigal. 35 of his
frottole survive,
along with two
motets and a lauda.
Stylistically they are typical...
-
practice for the
revival of the
recitar cantando of
baroque Italy and the
frottole of Naples,
though his "folk"
touches are not
equally appreciated by all...
- (1504)
Frottole I (1504)
Frottole II (1505)
Frottole III (1505)
Frottole IV (1505)
Frottole V (1505)
Frottole VI (1506)
Frottole VII (1507)
Frottole IX (1509)...
- Rome". His
first publication dates from 1510, and was a
collection of
frottole. Like Petrucci,
whose similar Odhecaton had
appeared eight years earlier...
- four-voice frottola, "Io non
posso piu durare", from Petrucci's
Fifth Book of
Frottole (1505). Lost
works include a
Credo setting in six voices, a five-voice...
-
Geschichte der Musik, 1937, rev. 1938, 1947
Canzoni Sonetti Strambotti et
Frottole.
Libro Tertio (
Andrea Antico, 1517).
Smith College: Northampton, MA, 1941...