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The early development of the Italian madrigal was fostered as much by foreigners as by natives, and the considerable contributions made by the 16th-century Flemish composers Jacques Arcadelt, Philippe Verdelot, and Adriaan Willaert should not be underestimated. Although Willaert’s settings of the works of the 14th-century Italian poet Petrarch and other serious Renaissance poets maintain an invariably high contrapuntal interest and are frequently suitable for choral performance, his compositions in the lighter, more homophonic vein, are well worth acquaintance. Cipriano de Rore, another Netherlander adopted by Italy, felt Willaert’s influence strongly yet contrived to set new standards in the interpretation ...(100 of 10158 words)