Note nere
Note nere (English: black note) was a style of madrigal composition, which used shorter note values than usual and had more black note-heads.[1]
The style was introduced around 1540, and had a short vogue among composers publishing in Venice including Costanzo Festa, Giaches de Wert, Cipriano di Rore and many minor composers, such as in the First Book (1548) of Giandomenico Martoretta.
The first note nere madrigals had appeared, unannounced, in 1538, in the music for the wedding of Cosimo de Medici, where four of seven canzone by Corteccia are note nere, and 1539 with two of the madrigals in Arcadelt's Fourth Book. The first publication to establish the pattern that title pages of the collections were often marked as madrigali a note nere, in contrast to conventional but unstated note bianche, was Claudio Veggio's book of 1540 - which was marked misura a breve; the same idea. Alfred Einstein interpreted this as "short measure".
The time signature of note nere madrigals was
References
- Haar J. Madrigal // The Harvard dictionary of music, 4th ed., 2003, p.480.
- James Haar,Paul Edward Corneilson The science and art of Renaissance music Chapter 9 The Note Nere Madrigal.