- Carnival song
A carnival song or "canto carnascialesco" (pl. "canti carnascialeschi") was a late fifteenth- and early sixteenth-century song used to celebrate the
carnival season inFlorence , mainly the weeks precedingLent and theCalendimaggio , which lasted from May 1 to June 24. The festivities included song and dance, usually performed or led by masked professionals.The carnival song was elaborated under the rule of Duke
Lorenzo the Magnificent (1469–92) and the ducal court became more involved. Lorenzo wrotelyric poems designed to be sung by members of his court and of the city's guilds, whose members also sang their own songs, with lyrics drawn mostly from popular legend and daily life. These "canti" are the textual descendants of the "caccia ", a song form that was typicallysatiric andobscene , revelling in thedouble entendre . The musical settings were generallychord al andstrophic (often ABBC), similar to thefrottola , which was then popular inMantua . The A and B stanzas were typically incommon metre , the final stanza was then in perfect (i.e. 3/4) time. Performance outdoors and before popular audiences probably constrained the music to be simple and unsubtle. These songs were usuallyserenade s, chariot songs, andprocessional s, often song fromparade float s.Though we know that
Heinrich Isaac composed "canti carnascialeschi" for Lorenzo around 1480, none of these works survive. One anonymous surviving song, "Orsu car' Signori", is anadvertisement paid for by the guild ofscribe s: "Step up, dear sirs, if yo uwish your bulls quickly certified." The fate of many of the "canti" was sealed by the fall of theMedici and theBonfire of the Vanities (and the like) underGirolamo Savonarola . Some melodies escaped destruction by being set to new (sacred) words. The "canti", with the carnivals, were restored after Savonarola's downfall in 1498, but they were increasing ceremonial in character and the exercise of writing songs for them became more literary.ources
*Grout, Donald Jay, and Palisca, Claude V. (2001). "A History of Western Music", 6th ed. New York: W. W. Norton & Co. ISBN 0 393 97527 4.
*"Carnival song". (2008). In "Encyclopædia Britannica". Retrieved 30 August 2008, from [http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/96378/carnival-song "Encyclopædia Britannica Online"] .
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.