- Lute song
The lute song was a generic form of music in the late Renaissance and very early Baroque eras, generally consisting of a singer accompanying himself on a
lute , though lute songs may often have been performed by a singer and a separate lutenist. A bassviol was very often used to support the bass line in performance.Many of the composers of lute songs were themselves lutenists, and performed the songs themselves; many were also madrigalists or composers of
chanson s. In general, lute songs were written from about1550 to around1650 , though there is evidence that some music was performed this way much earlier (for instance,Baldassare Castiglione mentions thatfrottola were sometimes performed by solo voice and lute, presumably in the first decade or so of the 16th century.)The lute song flourished in
Italy ,France andEngland ; it had different styles and names in each location. In England, it was called theayre (or air). Famous composers includedJohn Dowland ,Thomas Campion , andPhilip Rosseter . In Italy, composers of lute songs includedVincenzo Galilei andLuzzasco Luzzaschi ; the songs written later in the 16th century were the first to show Baroque characteristics. The French lute song was called the "air de cour ", and had a somewhat longer lifespan than elsewhere, due to the influence of "musique mesurée "; it also influenced early Frenchopera .References
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* Nigel Fortune, David Greer. "Air" in ibid., i, 180-182.
*Gustave Reese , "Music in the Renaissance". New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1954. ISBN 0-393-09530-4
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