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  2. Baroque music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baroque_music

    Baroque music (UK: / b ə ˈ r ɒ k / or US: / b ə ˈ r oʊ k /) refers to the period or dominant style of Western classical music composed from about 1600 to 1750. [1] The Baroque style followed the Renaissance period, and was followed in turn by the Classical period after a short transition (the galant style). The Baroque period is divided ...

  3. Madrigal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madrigal

    In the transition from Renaissance music (1400–1600) to Baroque music (1580–1750), Claudio Monteverdi usually is credited as the principal madrigalist whose nine books of madrigals showed the stylistic, technical transitions from the polyphony of the late 16th century to the styles of monody and of the concertato accompanied by basso ...

  4. Rondeau (forme fixe) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rondeau_(forme_fixe)

    A rondeau (French:; plural: rondeaux) is a form of medieval and Renaissance French poetry, as well as the corresponding musical chanson form. Together with the ballade and the virelai it was considered one of three formes fixes, and one of the verse forms in France most commonly set to music between the late 13th and the 15th centuries.

  5. Guillaume de Machaut - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guillaume_de_Machaut

    Machaut's music comprises a wide variety, from complex masses to short songs, and despite the differences of genre, most still contain "typical Machaut motifs". [8] He lived after the flowering of both the secular troubadour and trouvère song movements and the ars antiqua church style.

  6. Marc-Antoine Charpentier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marc-Antoine_Charpentier

    Marc-Antoine Charpentier (French: [maʁk ɑ̃twan ʃaʁpɑ̃tje]; 1643 – 24 February 1704 [2]) was a French Baroque composer during the reign of Louis XIV.One of his most famous works is the main theme from the prelude of his Te Deum H.146, Marche en rondeau.

  7. Siciliana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siciliana

    The siciliana [sitʃiˈljaːna] or siciliano (also known as sicilienne or ciciliano) is a musical style or genre often included as a movement within larger pieces of music starting in the Baroque period. It is in a slow 6 8 or 12 8 time with lilting rhythms, making it somewhat resemble a slow jig or tarantella, and is usually in a minor key.

  8. Classical music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classical_music

    Baroque instruments including hurdy-gurdy, harpsichord, bass viol, lute, violin, and baroque guitar. Baroque music is characterized by the use of complex tonal counterpoint and the use of a basso continuo, a continuous bass line. Music became more complex in comparison with the simple songs of all previous periods. [67]

  9. Transition from Renaissance to Baroque in instrumental music

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transition_from...

    In the years centering on 1600 in Europe, several distinct shifts emerged in ways of thinking about the purposes, writing and performance of music.Partly these changes were revolutionary, deliberately instigated by a group of intellectuals in Florence known as the Florentine Camerata, and partly they were evolutionary, in that precursors of the new Baroque style can be found far back in the ...