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strambotto

Meaning of strambotto

According to the sources, strambotto was a Sicilian folk song form that originated in the 13th century and consisted of either 6 or 8 hendecasyllabic lines. The sonnet form is believed to have originated from strambotto, when Giacomo di Lentino added two tercets to the 8-line stanza in order to create the 14-line sonnet.

The name strambotto appears to come from estrabot , an Occitan term for emotive poems. Strambotto was also a style of accompanied recitation of poetry or singing of poetry that was employed in the 14th century.

An early form of Italian poetry that was set to music by composers of the frottola and madrigals of the 16th century. The poetry is set into very strict stanzas of eight hendecasyllabic lines (or eight lines with eleven syllables). This type of stanza is known as rispetto or ottava rima. When set to music, therispetto dealt with the composer paying his respects to his lady love and can be found in one or more stanzas, the ottava rima came from literature generally in multiple stanzas, and the strambotto was typically created with a single stanza.

There are three basic types of strambotto that are identified by their rhyme scheme, but there are also a few examples of the strambotto being through-composed. The "strambotto toscano" is identified by the rhyme scheme abababcc. This was the more common poem set to music in the 15th and 16th centuries. In the 17th century, the rhyme scheme of abababab was more common and called :"strambotto siciliano" or "arie siciliano" (see siciliana #2). The last (and least common) was the "strambotto romagnuolo" with a rhyme scheme of ababccdd.

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