A golden age that Renaissance, especially for Italy, a shining gem in Europe; it excels in every artistic field and exports all its art with great success, and it is no coincidence that many of the most excellent composers of the time have come to Italy to perfect their studies in music (but not only), sometimes becoming Masters of Cappella or, in any case, important points of reference in some of the finest courtly courts.
It is a historical-artistic-musical period of great cultural ferment, a lively breeding ground of great ideas, great masters and different genres, constantly changing and improving, from the villotte to the motets, from the sparkling chansons to the solemn masses, psalms and madrigals. A very fertile ground that favors the emergence of composers of the caliber of the French Philippe Verdelot, one of the first to compose polyphonies with five and more voices, by Orlando di Lasso, extraordinary Franco-Flemish composer, prolific and with absolutely original and heterogeneous musical writing , of the “sacred” English masters of the majestic cathedrals such as William Byrd and his mentor, Thomas Tallis, of the Mantuan Salomone Rossi, who introduced the Jewish psalmody into the refined madrigal compositional style, as well as the later Monteverdi, the culmination of the evolution of musical language which marks the transition from the Renaissance to the Baroque.