Glossary of Italian music explained

Italian music terminology consists of words and phrases used in the discussion of the music of Italy. Some Italian music terms are derived from the common Italian language. Others come from Spanish, or Neapolitan, Sicilian, Sardinian or other regional languages of Italy. The terms listed here describe a genre, song form, dance, instrument, style, quality of music, technique or other important aspect of Italian music.[1] [2]

Dances

See also: Italian folk dance.

A Carnival dance[1]

A ritual dance[1]

A traditional Sardinian folk dance

A ballroom dance

A 6/8 dance historically associated with Monferrato and the valleys of Fassa and Rendena[1]

An old form of the tarantella

A folk dance[1]

A widespread, leaping folk dance, originally in 3/4 time, and later in 3/8 and 6/8, derived from a court dance that evolved from the galliarde and was originally known in Spain as the alta danza, from saltare, to leap[3]

A folk dance[1]

A couple dance in 6/8 time, intended to cure the supposedly poisonous bite of the tarantula[7]

A folk dance, one of Italy's oldest

Instrumentation

A hammered dulcimer[2]

A Sardinian clarinet, played using circular breathing[1] [2]

A diatonic button accordion which accompanies the saltarello, and has largely replaced the bagpipe[2]

A tambourine[1]

Songs, formats and pieces

Sicilian brass bands[14]

A singing style for three men, most common in Rovigno in Istria[1]

A song form peculiar to Rovigno[1]

A kind of popular song from Naples, Neapolitan song[14]

Strophic songs, often in Latin[1] [2]

A music and drama celebration held during maggio[1] [2]

A kind of dance song, most common in Trento; it is composed of six-line stanzas of eleven syllables per line[2]

work songs[1]

A form of Calabrian multi-part song

An eight line song, most common in Central Italy, especially Lazio, Tuscany and Abruzzo[1] [2] [14]

Sardinian polyphonic chant[14]

dirty and garage

A form of multi-part song from Lazio

A form of Calabrian multi-part song

Techniques

Other terms

A May celebration[2]

A spring holiday[2]

Notes and References

  1. New Grove Encyclopedia of Music, pp 637–680
  2. Keller, Marcello Sorce, Roberto Catalano and Giuseppina Colicci, "Italy" in the Garland Encyclopedia of World Music, pp 604–625
  3. Web site: Saltarello. StreetSwing's Dance History Archives. July 15, 2006 .
  4. Web site: Furlana. StreetSwing's Dance History Archives. July 15, 2006 .
  5. Web site: Galliarde. Street Swing's Dance History Archives. July 15, 2006 .
  6. Web site: July 15, 2006 . International Dance Glossary . World Music Central . https://web.archive.org/web/20060711121510/http://www.worldmusiccentral.org/staticpages/index.php/glossary . July 11, 2006 . dead .
  7. Web site: La Tarantella. StreetSwing's Dance History Archives. July 15, 2006 .
  8. Web site: Workshops. Musicantica. July 15, 2006 .
  9. Mario Sarica, Strumenti Musicali Popolari in Sicilia, Assessorato alla cultura, Provincia di Messina 1994. Excerpted in Il Flauto in Sicilia
  10. Levy, "Italian Music" in the Garland Encyclopedia of World Music, pp 860–864
  11. Web site: Accordion History in Italy. Accordions.com. July 15, 2006 .
  12. Web site: April 20, 2006 . Glossary of Folk Musical Instruments & Styles from Around the World. Hobgoblin Info Source.
  13. Web site: Italian Treasury - Alan Lomax Collection. Musical Traditions Internet Magazine. July 15, 2006 .
  14. Surian, Allessio, "Tenores and Tarantellas", in the Rough Guide to World Music, pp 189–201
  15. Web site: Sicilian Folklife. Italian Los Angeles. July 15, 2006 .
  16. Web site: Multivocal music in Central and Southern Italy. Detailed Maps on the Spreading of Multipart Singing in the Balkans and in the Mediterranean. Antonello Ricci. July 15, 2006 .
  17. Web site: A LAVAGNA CANTI E RIME DAL TRALLALERO AL SUD ITALIA. Prono Provincia Notizie. July 15, 2006. it. https://web.archive.org/web/20060512152129/http://prono.provincia.genova.it/notizia.asp?IDNotizia=6886. May 12, 2006. dead.
  18. Book: Dizionario dei cantautori. Monti, Giangilberto. Veronica Di Pietro. July 15, 2006.
  19. Web site: Il coro a tenores CULTURA POPOLARE di Neoneli. July 15, 2006 . Isolasarda.