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Artist
Maddalena Casulana (c. 1544 – c. 1590) was an Italian composer, lutenist and singer of the late Renaissance. She is the first female composer to have her music printed and published in the history of western music. Extremely little is known about her life, other than what can be inferred from the dedications and writings on her collections of madrigals. Most likely she was born at Casole d'Elsa, near Siena, from the evidence of her name. Her first work dates from 1566: four madrigals in a collection, Il Desiderio, which she produced in Florence. Two years later she published in Venice her first actual book of madrigals for four voices, Il primo libro di madrigali, which is the first printed, published work by a woman in western music history. Also that year Orlando di Lasso conducted a work of hers at the court of Albert V, Duke of Bavaria in Munich; however the music has not survived. She evidently was close to Isabella de' Medici, and dedicated some of her music to her. In 1570, 1583 and 1586 she published other books of madrigals, all at Venice. Sometime during this period she married a man named Mezari, but no other information is known about him, or where she (or they) were living. Evidently she visited Verona, Milan and Florence, based on information contained in dedications, and likely she went to Venice as well, since her music was published there and numerous Venetians commented on her abilities. The following line in the dedication to her first book of madrigals,
Il desiderio: No. 3, Morir non può il mio cuore
1,3692Morir non può il mio cuore
4123Maddalena Casulana : Morir non può il mio core
2884Maddalena Casulana : O notte o ciel o mar
2465Il desiderio: No. 3, Morir non puo il mio cuore (Arr. J. MacDonald for Strings)
856Morir non può il mio core
817Birds, Madrigal
738Casulana: Morir Non Può Il Mio Cuore
729O notte, o cielo, o mar - Arr. for Guitar
6010Vagh’ amorosi augelli
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Maddalena Casulana: Madrigali (Arr. for Guitar)

Il Secondo Libro de Madrigali a Quattro Voci (Maddalena Casulana, Renaissance for Steel Guitar)
Madrigals
English And Italian Renaissance Madrigals
Verklingend und ewig
I canti di Euterpe : Composizioni femminili (XVI - XVII secolo)
New Historical Anthology of Music by Women
Among Whirlwinds
Animals in Renaissance Music (Inspired by "The Bestiario" by Leonardo Da Vinci)
Understanding Music (Disc 1)

Masters Of Imitation
Understanding Music [Disc 1]