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Frescobaldi

[ fres-kaw-bahl-dee ]

noun

  1. Gi·ro·la·mo [jee-, raw, -lah-maw], 1583–1643, Italian organist and composer.


Frescobaldi

/ freskoˈbaldi /

noun

  1. FrescobaldiGirolamo15831643MItalianMUSIC: organistMUSIC: composer Girolamo (dʒiˈrɔːlamo). 1583–1643, Italian organist and composer, noted esp for his organ and harpsichord music
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Example Sentences

Throughout Cantelli’s career in the United States, there were criticisms of his repertoire, which ran from Frescobaldi and Monteverdi to Barber and Dallapiccola but turned out to be repetitive from season to season.

She turned instead to trying to start an early-music revival, arranging a series of lecture-recitals in the Salle Érard from 1862, at which her students paired her works with those of Byrd, Frescobaldi, Rameau and others.

It has now expanded this in-house roster to include a rosé Champagne, a Provençal rosé, a Côtes du Rhône, a pinot grigio from Friuli, and two Tuscan reds: a well-made 2017 Chianti Rùfina produced by Frescobaldi; and Lo Stradone, a super Tuscan blend from the esteemed Ornellaia winery in the Maremma region.

Sigismondo d’India was a young Italian composer at the explosively creative dawn of the 17th century, the time of Gesualdo, Frescobaldi, Monteverdi and Caccini.

Opening the recording with a Frescobaldi toccata, Rondeau places two more — the first imposingly grand, the second lush and lonely, a child playing in an empty castle — at its core.

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frescofresco secco