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"canzonet" Definitions
  1. a light usually strophic song
  2. a part-song resembling but less elaborate than a madrigal

9 Sentences With "canzonet"

How to use canzonet in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "canzonet" and check conjugation/comparative form for "canzonet". Mastering all the usages of "canzonet" from sentence examples published by news publications.

At the sides, a canone and canzonet by Giordani, together with a French and Venetian canzonet, with music.
It also belongs to the octave group, and is diversified with a canzonet.
He takes his lute and sings an Italian canzonet which has the desired effect.
The sestina, a very elaborate canzonet, was invented in Provence and borrowed by the Italians.
In The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (1980 edition), Roger Fiske made the first attempt to distinguish between the works of Thomas Carter and his near-namesake (Charles) Thomas Carter. According to him, many songs published after 1793 can be attributed to Thomas, including the duet Goodman White and Gaffer Grey op. 24 (c. 1796) and a Canzonet op.
Upon the death of queen Caroline, his royal protectress, in 1737, he left England and returned to Italy, where he died in Todi in 1767, leaving behind him a very curious cabinet, and a rich library of well-chosen books. In Dichtung und Wahrheit (Poetry and Truth), Goethe explained that he learned by heart Rolli's canzonet Solitario Bosco Ombroso, performed by his “old Italian teacher named Giovanizzi” even before he knew a word of Italian.
"Now is the month of maying" is one of the most famous of the English balletts (a light dancelike part song similar to a madrigal, frequently with a 'fa-la- la' chorus). It was written by Thomas Morley and published in 1595. It is based on the canzonet So ben mi ch'a bon tempo used by Orazio Vecchi in his 1590 Selva di varia ricreatione.Phillip Ledger (ed) The Oxford Book of English Madrigals (1978) Oxford University Press, and co-issued recording, by Pro Cantione Antiqua It was printed in Thomas Morley's First Book of Ballets to Five Voyces (1595).
Nevertheless, the award of prizes may have altered the balance. In 1762 prizes were awarded for catch, canon, serious glee, and cheerful glee. In 1768 Italian catch was added, and later we find ode, canzonet, and madrigal as well as the more frequent glee and catch. The first secretary of the Club was Thomas Warren (later Warren-Horne after an inheritance) who published an annual collection of catches and glees from 1762 to 1793, generally known as the Warren Collection.Warren : Extremely rare - but a good facsimile is published by Mellifont Press, Wilmington, Delaware, 1970, edited by Emanuel Rubin in four volumes containing 653 assorted catches, canons, glees &c.
Amorous melancholy had already been identified as a variety of that emotion by Robert Burton a century before Pope's poem. Melancholy is mentioned in its third line and recurs later, suitably inspired by a Gothic landscape of gloomy forest, overhanging crags, tottering aisles and ancient tombs.Johannes Hendrik Harder, Observations on Some Tendencies of Sentiment and Ethics, New York 1933, pp.82-3 It is equally the sentiment emphasised in George Pinto's 'canzonet' near the start of the 19th century, which is a setting of the passage beginning "Soon as the letters trembling I unclose, That well-known name awakens all my woes" (lines 29-48), with its repeated references to tears and sighs.

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