noun
- a type of secular vocal music composition, typically for several voices without instrumental accompaniment, popular in the Renaissance period
- a short lyrical poem, especially one expressing love or pastoral themes
Usage: music
Usage: poetry; literary
Examples
- The choir performed a beautiful Renaissance madrigal at the concert.
- Students in music history class studied the complex harmonies of Italian madrigals.
- The composer wrote a modern madrigal inspired by 16th-century styles.
- She discovered a collection of English madrigals in the library.
- The poet’s madrigal celebrated the beauty of spring flowers.
- Medieval troubadours often composed madrigals about courtly love.
- The madrigal’s intricate vocal parts required skilled singers to perform.