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Ballata
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{{Short description|Music genre}} {{Italic title}} {{More citations needed|date=December 2009}} The '''''ballata''''' (plural: ''ballate'') is an Italian [[poetic form|poetic]] and [[musical form]] in use from the late 13th to the 15th century. It has the musical form AbbaA, with the first and last [[stanza]]s having the same texts. It is thus most similar to the [[France|French]] musical '[[formes fixes|forme fixe]]' [[virelai]] (and not the [[ballade (forme fixe)|ballade]] as the name might otherwise suggest). The first and last "A" is called a ''ripresa'', the "b" lines are ''piedi'' (feet), while the fourth line is called a "volta". Longer ballate may be found in the form AbbaAbbaA, etc. Unlike the virelai, the two "b" lines usually have exactly the same music and only in later ballate pick up the (formerly distinctly French) first and second (open and close) endings. The term comes from the verb ''ballare'', to [[dance]], and the form certainly began as dance music. The ballata was one of the most prominent secular musical forms during the [[trecento]], the period often known as the Italian ''[[ars nova]]''. Ballate are sung at the end of each day of [[Giovanni Boccaccio|Boccaccio]]'s ''[[The Decameron|Decameron]]'' (only one musical setting of these poems, by [[Lorenzo da Firenze]], survives). Early ballate, such as those found in the [[Rossi Codex]] are monophonic. Later, ballate are found for two or three voices. The most notable composer of ballate is [[Francesco Landini]], who composed in the second half of the 14th century. Other composers of ballata include [[Andrea da Firenze]], a contemporary of [[Francesco Landini]], as well as [[Bartolino da Padova]], [[Johannes Ciconia]], [[Prepositus Brixiensis]]<ref>[[Stanley Boorman]] ''Studies in the Performance of Late Medieval Music'' p.225</ref> and [[Zacara da Teramo]]. In the 15th century both [[Arnold de Lantins]] and [[Guillaume Dufay]] wrote ballate; they were among the last to do so. ==See also== * ''[[Ballo]]'' ==References== {{Reflist}} {{Music of the Trecento}} {{Western medieval lyric forms}} {{Authority control}} [[Category:Medieval music genres]] [[Category:Italian music history]] [[Category:Western medieval lyric forms]] {{Music-genre-stub}} {{Poetry-stub}}
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