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  2. Giovanni Paolo Paladino - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giovanni_Paolo_Paladino

    Giovanni Paolo Paladino or Jean-Paul Paladin (fl. 1540-1560) was an Italian composer and lutenist from Milan.He was born Giovanni Paolo Paladino and was also a merchant who maintained a large house and vineyard in Lyons. [1]

  3. Fabrizio Dentice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fabrizio_Dentice

    Fabrizio Dentice (also Fabricio, Fabritio) (1539 in Naples – 24 February 1581 in Naples) was an Italian composer and virtuoso lute and viol player. [ 1 ] Biography

  4. Simone Molinaro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simone_Molinaro

    Molinaro wrote at the time when, according to Paul Henry Lang, lute music was reaching its apogee. Along with Giovanni Terzi, Molinaro's lute music introduces "a finished, graceful, and sovereign instrumental style, capable of all shades of expression and of a technique which we usually associate only with the vocal music of the period". [5]

  5. Lute - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lute

    The lute is used in a great variety of instrumental music from the Medieval to the late Baroque eras and was the most important instrument for secular music in the Renaissance. [3] During the Baroque music era, the lute was used as one of the instruments that played the basso continuo accompaniment parts.

  6. Vincenzo Capirola - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vincenzo_Capirola

    Vincenzo Capirola (1474 – after 1548) was an Italian composer, lutenist and nobleman of the Renaissance. His music is preserved in an illuminated manuscript called the Capirola Lutebook , which is considered to be one of the most important sources of lute music of the early 16th century.

  7. Intabulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intabulation

    The exception is the 16th- and 17th-century Italian keyboard pieces which included both vocal and instrumental music. Intabulations contain all the vocal lines of a polyphonic piece , for the most part, although they are sometimes combined or redistributed in order to work better on the instrument the intabulation is intended for, and idiomatic ...

  8. Fantasia (musical form) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fantasia_(musical_form)

    The term was first applied to music during the 16th century, at first to refer to the imaginative musical "idea" rather than to a particular compositional genre.Its earliest use as a title was in German keyboard manuscripts from before 1520, and by 1536 is found in printed tablatures from Spain, Italy, Germany, and France.

  9. Archlute - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archlute

    Any late Italian Baroque music with a part labelled 'liuto' will mean 'arciliuto', the classic Renaissance lute being in disuse by this time. Among the most important composers of archlute music in the 17th century we can name Alessandro Piccinini, Giovanni Girolamo Kapsperger (c. 1580 – 17 January 1651) and in the 18th century Giovanni Zamboni, whose set of 12 sonatas (1718, Lucca) for the ...