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Idyll
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==Terminology== The term is used in music to refer generally to a work evocative of pastoral or rural life such as [[Edward MacDowell]]'s ''Forest Idylls'', and more specifically to a kind of French courtly entertainment (''[[divertissement]]'') of the [[Baroque music|baroque era]] where a pastoral poem was set to music, accompanied by ballet and singing. Examples of the latter are [[Jean-Baptiste Lully|Lully]]'s ''Idylle sur la Paix'' set to a text by [[Jean Racine|Racine]], [[Marc-Antoine Charpentier|Charpentier]]’s ''idylle sur le retour de la santé du Roi'' H.489 and [[Henri Desmarets|Desmarets]]' ''Idylle sur la naissance du duc de Bourgogne'' set to a text by [[Antoinette Deshoulières]].<ref>Randel, Don Michael (1999). "Idyll", [https://books.google.com/books?id=7iuZ6HaEMmoC&q=Idyll ''The Harvard Concise Dictionary of Music and Musicians'']. Harvard University Press, p. 312 and ''[[passim]]''. {{ISBN|0-674-00084-6}}; Sadie, Julie Anne (1998). ''Companion to Baroque Music''. University of California Press, p. 53. {{ISBN|0-520-21414-5}}</ref> In the visual arts, an idyll is a painting depicting the same sort of subject matter to be found in idyllic poetry, often with rural or peasant life as its central theme. One of the earliest examples is the early 15th century ''[[Très Riches Heures du Duc de Berry]]''.<ref>Hagen, Rose-Marie and Hagen, Rainer (2002) [https://books.google.com/books?id=e2DvEibWkKsC&dq=idyll+painting&pg=PA20 ''What Great Paintings Say'', Volume 1]. [[Taschen]], p. 20. {{ISBN|3-8228-2100-4}}</ref> The genre was particularly popular in English paintings of the Victorian era.<ref>Treble, Rosemary (1989). "The Victorian picture of the country" in [https://books.google.com/books?id=7P8NAAAAQAAJ&dq=idyll+painting&pg=PA58 ''The Rural idyll''] (G. E. Mingay, ed.). Routledge, pp. 51–59. {{ISBN|0-415-03394-2}}</ref>
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