Charles Hubert Hastings Parry: Difference between revisions
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* ''Beyond these voices there is peace'' (1908) | * ''Beyond these voices there is peace'' (1908) | ||
* ''Eton'' (Algernon Charles Swinburne) (1891) | * ''Eton'' (Algernon Charles Swinburne) (1891) | ||
* ''Eton Memorial Ode'' (1908) | * ''Eton Memorial Ode'' (1908) | ||
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====Other Solo Works==== | ====Other Solo Works==== | ||
* ''Von elder art'' (1900) | * ''Von elder art'' (1900) | ||
* ''The Bard of Dimbovitzia'' (1900) | * ''The Bard of Dimbovitzia'' (1900) | ||
* ''The Soldier's Tent'' | |||
* ''Newfoundland'' (Sir Calvendish Boyle) - first setting (1904) | * ''Newfoundland'' (Sir Calvendish Boyle) - first setting (1904) | ||
* ''Fear no more the heat o' the sun'' (William Shakespeare) | * {{NoCo|England}} (William Shakespeare) (1919) ( [http://imslp.org/wiki/England_%28Parry%2C_Charles_Hubert_Hastings%29 {{pdf}}] ) | ||
* ''Fear no more the heat o' the sun'' (William Shakespeare) (1906) | |||
* ''The Laird of Cockpen'' (Lady Nairn) (1906) published (1907) | * ''The Laird of Cockpen'' (Lady Nairn) (1906) published (1907) | ||
* ''The river of life'' (Lord Pembroke) (1870) | * ''The river of life'' (Lord Pembroke) (1870) |
Revision as of 21:29, 3 May 2009
Life
This page is awaiting cleanup. |
Born: 27 February 1848
Died: 7 October 1918
Biography
Sir Charles Hubert Hastings Parry was an English composer, probably best known for his setting of William Blake's poem, Jerusalem. Born in Bournemouth, Hampshire, and brought up at Highnam Court, Gloucestershire, he was the second son of Thomas Gambier Parry, of Highnam Court, Gloucester - an amateur artist. His grandfather was a director of the East India Company, and his grandmother was a member of a well-known naval family, which included Lord Gambier, the Admiral of the British fleet. Charles Hubert was educated at Malvern, Twyford, near Winchester, and then at Eton (from 1861), and then at Exeter College, Oxford. While still at Eton he wrote music and two anthems that were published in 1865. Parry wrote solo songs all his life, starting with several composed while he was 18 years old and still attending Eton. Later he wrote an Evening Service in D, and dedicated it to Sir John Stainer. He took the degree of Mus.B. at Oxford at the early age of eighteen, and later earned a B.A. in 1870.
He then left Oxford for London where in the following year he joined a young Eton friend working at Lloyds. Working this job for four years, in duty to his father's desire to not make music his career but his avocation, Charles Hubert was ultimately set free when the business suddenly failed. This failure allowed him to abandon the business for a career in Music, which he commensed by taking a Doctor of Music at Cambridge in 1883. Following this he and took a position at Oxford, suceeding Dr. Corfe in the position of Choragus, simultaneously being admitted to Oxford as a Doctor of Music ad eundem in 1884.
He studied successively with H. H. Pierson (at Stuttgart), Sterndale Bennett and Macfarren; but the most important part of his artistic development was with the pianist Edward Dannreuther in London. Among the larger works of this early period is an overture, Guillem de Cabestanh (Crystal Palace, 1879), a pianoforte concerto in F sharp minor, played by Dannreuther at the Crystal Palace and Richter concerts in 1880, and his first choral work: The Scenes from Prometheus Unbound, produced at the Gloucester Festival, 1880. These works, like the Symphony in G, given at the Birmingham Festival of 1882, seemed strange even to educated listeners, who were confused by the intricacy of Parry's treatment. It was not until his setting of James Shirley's 1640 ode, The Glories of our Blood and State, premiered at Gloucester in 1883, and the Partita for violin and pianoforte (published about the same time) that Parry's importance finally was realized by the musical public.
His first major works begin to appear in 1880: a piano concerto and a choral setting of scenes from Shelley's Prometheus Unbound. The first performance of the Prometheus has often been held to mark the start of a "renaissance" in English classical music. Parry achieved a greater contemporary success, however, with the ode Blest pair of Sirens (1887) which established him as the leading English choral composer of his day. Blest Pair of Sirens utilized lyrics from John Milton's Ode "At a Solemn Music", and was first performed at the inaugural concert in the newly-built "Albert Hall". The work is dedicated to C. V. Stanford and the Bach Choir. Among the most successful of a long series of similar works were the Ode on Saint Cecilia's Day (1889), the oratorios, Judith (1888) and Job (1892), the psalm-setting De Profundis (1891) and The Pied Piper of Hamelin (1905). His solo works composed in 12 sets of "English Lyrics" (published in 1885, 1886, 1895, 1896, 1902, 1903, 1907 and 1909, and posthumanously in 1918 and 1920). His early orchestral works include four symphonies, the Overture to an Unwritten Tragedy (1893), and the Elegy for Brahms (1897). After Parry joined the staff of the Royal College of Music in 1884 he was appointed its Director in 1894, a post he held until his death. In 1900 he succeeded John Stainer as professor of music at Oxford University. His later music included a series of six "ethical cantatas", experimental works in which he hoped to supersede the traditional oratorio and cantata forms. They were generally unsuccessful with the public, though Elgar admired The Vision of Life (1907) and The Soul's Ransom (1906) has had several modern performances. He finally was forced to resign his Oxford appointment on doctor's advice in 1908, and the last decade of his life produced some of his finest works, including the Symphonic Fantasia '1912' (also called Symphony No. 5), the Ode on the Nativity (1912), Jerusalem (1916) and the Songs of Farewell (1916 – 1918).
Influenced as a composer principally by Bach and Brahms, Parry evolved a powerful diatonic style which itself greatly influenced future English composers such as Elgar and Vaughan Williams. His own full development as a composer was almost certainly hampered by the immense amount of work he took on, but his energy and charisma, not to mention his abilities as a teacher and administrator, helped establish art music at the centre of English cultural life. He collaborated with the poet Robert Bridges, and was responsible for many books on music, including The Evolution of the Art of Music (1896), the third volume of the Oxford History of Music (1907) and a study of Bach (1909).
His six "Songs of Farewell" are the last works in his repertoire, and seem to be a reflection of his resignation to his terminal illness. The poignant words of Thomas Campion's poem "Never weather-beaten sail" which entreats us:
- Than my wearied sprite now longs to fly out of my troubled breast:
- O come quickly, sweetest Lord, and take my soul to rest.
which seems a fitting epithet to one of England's greatest choral composers.
View the Wikipedia article on Charles Hubert Hastings Parry.
List of works
See Charles Hubert Hastings Parry compositions for a list of choral works pages sorted alphabetically by title.
Choral works
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- Angel Hosts, Sweet Love, Befriend Thee (Lord Francis Hervey) (1865)
- Agamemnon (Aeschylus) (1900)
- A Hymn for Aviators (Mary C. D. Hamilton) (1915)
- A Garland of Shakesperian and Other Old Fashioned Songs, Opus 21 (1873)
- Love's Perjuries / On a Day, Alack the Day (William Shakespeare)
- A Spring Song / It was a lover and his lass; with a hey and a ho, and a hey nonino! (William Shakespeare)
- A Contrast / The merry Bird Sits in the Tree (Anonymous)
- Concerning Love / Love is a Sickness (Samuel Daniel)
- A Sea Dirge / Full Fathom Five (William Shakespeare)
- Merry Margaret (Skelton)
- And all the earth shall own him
- And did those feet in ancient time / Jerusalem, Op. 208 (William Blake)
- Angel hosts, sweet love, befriend thee (Lord Francis Hervey) (1866, published 1867)
- Autumn - (Thomas Hood) (1865-66)
- Beyond these Voices there is Peace (1908)
- Blest pair of Sirens (John Milton) (1887) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Blessed is he (1865)
- Come join the merry chorus (Horace Smith) (1915)
- Dear Lord and Father of Mankind ( LilyPond ) (Text: John G. Whittier; Arr.: Mark Hamilton Dewey)
- De Profundis (1891), setting of Psalm 130, composed for Hereford Musical Festival:
- Prelude - Orchestra
- De Profundis clamavi - 12 part Chorus
- Fiant aures tuae intendes - Soprano Solo
- Sustinuit anima mea in verbo- 12 part Chorus
- A Custo dia mastutina - Soprano Solo
- Apud Dominum misericordia - 12 part Chorus
- Et ipse Redimet Israel - 12 part Chorus
- Phyllis (From an Elizabetian Song Book)
- O Love, they wrong thee much (From An Elizabethian Song Book) - (2 editions available)
- At Her Fair Hands (Robert Jones)
- Home of My Heart (Arthur Benson)
- You gentle nymphs (From An Elizabethian Song Book) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Come Pretty Wag (Martin Peerson)
- Ye Thrilled Me Once (Robert Seymour Bridges)
- Better Music Ne'er Were Known (Francis Beaumont and Fletcher)
- Beyond these voices there is peace (1908)
- Eton (Algernon Charles Swinburne) (1891)
- Eton Memorial Ode (1908)
- Fair Daffodils (Robert Herrick) (1866)
- Four unison songs (1909):
- The Owl (Lord Alfred Tennyson)
- A contented mind (James Joseph Sylvester)
- Sorrow and song (Hedderwick)
- The mistletoe (Father Prout)
- God is our hope (1913)
- Four Sonnets of Shakespeare (1887):
- When In Disgrace With Fortune / And Men’s Eyes, I all alone beweep my outcast state
- Farewell, Thou Art Too Dear / For My Possessing, and like enough thou know’st thy estimate
- Shall I Compare Thee To A Summer’s Day? / Thou art more lovely and more temperate
- When To The Sessions Of Sweet Silent Thought, / I summon up remembrance of things past
- Hear my words, ye people (1894) ( Sibelius 4 )
- He delivered the poor - Soprano solo
- How sweet the Answer
- He Is Coming (Gladstone) (1874) - Christmas Carol
- I Praise the Tender Flower (Robert Seymour Bridges)
- I sing the Birth
- I Was Glad When They Said Unto Me ( Sibelius 2 )
- In Praise of Song (Charles Hubert Hastings Parry?) (1904)
- Invocation to music - An Ode in Honour of Henry Purcell (Robert Seymour Bridges
- Intro. Myriad Voiced Queen!: Moderato/Turn, O Return!: Allegretto Tranquillo
- Thee, Fair Poetry Oft Hath Sought: Allegretto Tranquillo
- The Monstrous Sea: Maestoso Energico
- Love To Love Calleth: Andante Appassionato
- Dirge. To Me, To Me, Fair-Hearted Goddess, Come
- Man, Born Of Desire: Moderato/Rejoice, Ye Dead, Where'er Your Spirits Dwell
- O Enter With Me The Gates Of Delight: Allegro Vivace
- Chor: 'Thou, O Queen Of Sinless Grace': Allegro Vivo
- Jerusalem (And did those feet in ancient time) Op. 208 - (William Blake) (1916) - Hymn
- Job (1892) - Oratorio
- Judith or The Regeneration of Manasseh (1888) - Oratorio
- King Saul (1894) - Oratorio
- Arise and sing - Soprano Aria
- La belle dame sans merci (John Keats) (1914-1915, published 1979)
- L'Allegro ed Il Penseroso (John Milton) (1890) - ( )
- Land to the leeward ho (Margaret Preston) (1895)
- Long Since In Egypt's Plenteous Land
- O Brother Man
- O Day of Peace that Dimly Shines
- O Lord, Thou hast cast us out - Cantata (1867)
- Ode on Saint Cecilia's Day (1889) (Alexander Pope):
- Prelude - Organ
- Descend, ye Nine! - Chorus ( Sibelius 4 )
- By Music - Baritone Solo ( Sibelius 4 )
- But when our country's cause - Chorus
- But when through all the infernal bounds - Soprano Solo
- By the streams that ever flow - Chorus
- He sang, and Hell consented - Baritone Solo
- But soon, too soon - Soprano Solo
- Music the fiercet grief can charm - Baritone Solo and Chorus
- Ode on the Nativity (1912):
- Ode to Music (1901)
- Oft in the Stilly Night (Thomas Moore) (1866)
- Prevent us, O Lord (1865) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Promethius Unbound (Percy Bysshe Shelley) (1880)
- Proud Maisie (Sir Walter Scott)
- Rock-a-bye (Children's souvenier song book) (1893)
- School Songs (1911):
- The way to succeed (N. Macleod)
- Hie away (Sir Walter Scott)
- Dreams (C.F. Alexander)
- School Songs (1914):
- The fairies (A. M. Champneys)
- The Brown Burns of the Border (W. H. Ogilvie)
- Dreams (C.F. Alexander)
- Seven Part Songs for Male-Voice Choir (1910), scored ATB:
- Hang Fear, Cast Away Care (Parry)
- Love Wakes and Weeps (Scott)
- The Mad Dog (Goldsmith)
- That Very Wise Man, Old Aesop (Charles Dickens)
- Orpheus (Charles Hubert Hastings Parry)
- Out Opon It ! (Sir John Suckling)
- An Analogy (Charles Hubert Hastings Parry)
- Six Ethical Cantatas, Op. 12 (1906-07):
- War and peace (1903)
- Vox Clamantium (1903)
- The Love that Casteth Out Fear (1904)
- The Soul's Ransom (1906)
- The Vision of Life (1907)
- Beyond These Voices There Is Peace (1908)
- Six Lyrics from an Elizabetian Song Book (1897):
- Follow Your Saint (Thomas Campion)
- Love is a sickness (Samuel Daniel) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Turn All Thy Thoughts to Eyes (Thomas Campion)
- Whether Men Do Laugh or Weep (From an Elizabethian Song Book)
- The Sea Has Many a Thousand Sands (From an Elizabethian Song Book)
- Tell Me, O Love (From an Elizabethian Song Book)
- Six Modern Lyrics (1897):
- How Sweet the Answer (Moore)
- Since thou, O fondest (Robert Seymour Bridges) ( Sibelius 4 )
- If I Had But Two Little Wings (Coleridge)
- There Rolls the Deep (Lord Alfred Tennyson) ( Finale 2000 )
- What Voice of Gladness (Robert Seymour Bridges)
- Music, when soft voices die (Percy Bysshe Shelley) (1897) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Six Part Songs (1909):
- In a Harbour Grene (R. Wever)
- Sweet Day, So Cool (Herbert)
- Sorrow and Pain (Lady C. Elliot)
- Wrong Not, Sweet Empress (Sir Walter Raleigh)
- Prithee, Why ? (Sir John Suckling)
- My delight and thy delight (Robert Seymour Bridges) ( Sibelius 4)
- Song of Darkness and Light - Ode (1898)
- Sonnet XXIX (William Shakespeare)
- Songs of Farewell (1918)
- My soul, there is a country - (3 editions available)
- I Know My Soul Hath Power ( Sibelius 4 )
- Never weather-beaten sail ( Sibelius 4 )
- There Is An Old Belief ( Sibelius 4 )
- At the round earth's imagined corners ( Sibelius 4 )
- Lord, let me know mine end ( Sibelius 4 )
- Three Odes of Anacreon (1880)
- Away, away, you men of rules
- Fill me, boy, as deep a draught
- Golden hues of life are fled
- Three Trios for Female Voices (1875)
- To Night (Hamilton Aide)
- To Diana (Ben Johnson)
- Take, O Take These Lips Away (Shakespeare)
Three Unison Songs (1913)
- You'll get there ('The Trent Otter')
- Goodnight (A. M. Champneys)
- Ripple On (A. M. Champneys)
- Tell me Where is Fancy Bred ? (William Shakespeare) (1864)
- The Archarnians (Aristophanes) (1914)
- The best school of all (Henry Newbolt) (1908)
- The Birds - Music to accompany the Greek Play by Aristophanes - (1883) - Cambridge
- The Chivalry of the Sea (Robert Seymour Bridges) (1916) ( )
- The Contention of Ajax and Ulysses (1885)
- The Feather (Walter de la Mare)
- The Four Brothers (Walter de la Mare)
- The Glories of our Blood and State - an Ode (James Shirley) (1883) ( )
- The Lotus Eaters (Lord Alfred Tennyson) (1892) - ( )
- The love that casteth out fear (1904)
- The North Wind (William Ernest Henley)
- The Pied Piper of Hamelin (1905) ( NoteWorthy Composer )
- The Spring of the Year
- The river of life (Lord Pembroke) (1870)
- The Soldier's Tent (Alma Strettell) (1900, published 1901) (after Volkslieder, from 'The Bard of Dimbovitza')
- The Soul's Ransome (1906)
- The Vision of Life (1907)
- Three School Songs (1918)
- Neptune's empire (Thomas Campion)
- The Wind and the Leaves (George Cooper) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Song of the nights (Barry Cornwall)
- Three Songs for Kookoorookoo (1916)
- Brown and furry (Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- The Peacock has a scord of eyes (Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- The wind hath such a rainy sound (Christina Rossetti)
- Three Odes of Anacreon (1868–1878) (Translated by T. Moore)
- Away, away, you men of rules
- Fill me boy, as deep as a draught
- Golden hues of life are fled
- Two Carols (1915)
- I Sing the Birth
- Welcome, Yule! ( Sibelius )
- Twilight (Lord Pembroke) (1874)
- Voces Clamantium (1903) ( )
- Von edler Art (From a Nurenberg Song Book, 1549) (Translated by Paul England) (1900) * War and Peace (1903)
- Weathers (Thomas Hardy)
- When Christ was borne of Mary free (Harlean Manuscript) (1915)
- When the Morning Stars Together Their Glory Sang
- Who Can Dwell With Greatness? (Dobson) (1900)
- Why does the azure deck the sky (Moore) (1866)
- Within the Manger
Service Music
- Communion, Morning, Evening Services in D (1869)
- Coronation Te Deum (1911)
- Magnificat and Nunc Dimittis / Evening Service in D (1897)
- Thanksgiving Te Deum (1900)
- Evening Service in D (1881)
- Te Deum and Benedictus in D (1868)
Hymns
Tunes |
Harmonizations |
Hymns (tune, harmony & words)
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Solo vocal works
English Lyrics (1881-1920)
74 songs in total - Published in 12 sets
- My true love hath my heart - (Sir Philip Sidney) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Good night / ah! no; the hour is ill (Percy Bysshe Shelly) ( Sibelius4 )
- Where shall the lover rest (Sir Walter Scott) ( Sibelius4 )
- Willow, willow, willow / The poor soul sat sighing by a sycamore tree (William Shakespeare) ( Sibelius 4 )
- O mistress mine (William Shakespeare) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Take, O take those lips away (William Shakespeare) ( Sibelius 4 )
- No longer mourn for me (William Shakespeare) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Blow, blow, thou winter wind (William Shakespeare) ( Sibelius 4 )
- When icicles hang by the wall (William Shakespeare) ( Sibelius 4 )
- To Lucasta on going to the wars (Richard Lovelace) ( Sibelius 4 )
- If thou wouldst ease thine heart (Thomas Lovell Beddoes) ( Sibelius 4 )
- To Althea from prison (Richard Lovelace) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Why so pale and Wan (Sir John Suckling) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Through the ivory gate (Julian Sturgis) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Of all the torments (William Walsh) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Thine eyes still shined for me (Ralph Waldo Emerson) ( Sibelius 4 )
- When lovers meet again (Langdon Elwyn Mitchell) ( Sibelius 4 )
- When we two parted (George Gordon Noel Byron) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Weep you no more (Anonymous 16th Century) ( Sibelius 4 )
- There be none of beauty's daughters (George Gordon Noel Byron, Lord Byron) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Bright Star! Would I were steadfast as thou art (John Keats) ( Sibelius 4 )
- A Stray Nymph Of Dian / I went ahunting with Queen Dian's maids; our sandals, bright with dew, swept through the grass (Julian Sturgis)
- Proud Maisie / is in the wood (Sir Walter Scott) ( Sibelius 4)
- Crabbed age and youth (William Shakespeare) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Lay a garland on my hearse (Francis Beaumont & John Fletcher) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Love and laughter (Arthur Butler)
- A girl to her class (Julian Sturgis)
- A Welsh lullaby / Sleep, sleep, all nature now is steeping her sons in sleep (E. O. Jones) ( Sibelius 4 )
- When comes my Gwen (Mynyddog, translated by E. O. Jones) ( Sibelius 4 )
- And yet I love her till I die / There is a lady sweet and kind (Anonymous) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Love is a bable (Anonymous) ( Sibelius 4 )
- A Lover's garland - (Arthur Perceval Graves)
- At the Hour the Long Day Ends (Arthur Perceval Graves)
- Under the greenwood tree (William Shakespeare) ( Sibelius 4)
- On a time the amorous silvy (Anonymous) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Follow a Shadow - (Ben Jonson)
- Ye little birds that sit and sing (Thomas Heywood) ( Sibelius 4 )
- O never say that I was false of heart (William Shakespere) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Julia / Some ask'd me where the rubies grew (Robert Herrick) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Sleep / Beautiful up from the deeps of the solemn sea cometh sweet Sleep (Julian Sturgis)
- Whence (Julian Sturgis) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Nightfall in Winter / Cold is the air (Langdon Elwyn Mitchell) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Marian (George Meredith) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Dirge in woods / A wind sways the pines, and below not a breath of wild air (George Meredith) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Looking backward / O my child love, my love of long ago (Julian Sturgis) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Grapes / Come, boy Bacchus, a bunch of grapes (Julian Sturgis) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Three Aspects (Mary Elizabeth Coleridge) ( Sibelius 4 )
- A Fairy Town (Mary Elizabeth Coleridge) ( Sibelius 4 )
- The Witches' Wood (Mary Elizabeth Coleridge) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Whether I Live (Mary Elizabeth Coleridge) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Armida's Garden / I have been there before thee, O my love! (Mary Elizabeth Coleridge) ( Sibelius 4 )
- The Maiden (Mary Elizabeth Coleridge) ( Sibelius 4 )
- There (Mary Elizabeth Coleridge) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Set 10 - (1909) published 1918
- My heart is like a singing bird (Christina Georgina Rossetti)
- Gone were but the winter cold - (Allan Cunningham) - (1916) ( Sibelius 4 )
- A Moment of Farewell (Julian Sturgis)
- The Child and the Twilight (L. E.Mitchell)
- From a city window (L. E.Mitchell)
- The Ungentle Guest / One Silent Night of Late (Herrick)
- Set 11 - (1910-1918) - published 1920
- One Golden Thread (Julia Chatterton)
- What part of dread eternity (Charles Hubert Hastings Parry?)
- The Spirit of the Spring (Alfred Perceval Graves)
- The Blackbird (Alfred Perceval Graves)
- The Faithful Lover (Alfred Perceval Graves)
- If I Might Ride on Puissant Wing (Julian Sturgis)
- Why Art Thou Slow, thou rest of trouble, Death, to stop a wretch's breath (Massinger)
- She is my love beyond all thought (Alfred Perceval Graves) ( Sibelius 4 )
- Set 12 - Works of various dates, some very early - published 1920
- When the Dew is Falling (Julia Chatterton)
- To Blossoms / Fair pledges of a fruitful tree, why do ye fall so fast? (Herrick)
- Rosaline / Like to the clear in highest sphere - (Thomas Lodge)
- Resurrection / When the Sun's Great Orb (H. Warner)
- Dream Pedlary (Thomas Lovell Beddoes)
- A Lament / O World! O Life! O Time! (Percy Bysshe Shelly)
- The Sound of Hidden Music (Julia Chatterton)
Other Solo Works
- Von elder art (1900)
- The Bard of Dimbovitzia (1900)
- The Soldier's Tent
- Newfoundland (Sir Calvendish Boyle) - first setting (1904)
- England (William Shakespeare) (1919) ( )
- Fear no more the heat o' the sun (William Shakespeare) (1906)
- The Laird of Cockpen (Lady Nairn) (1906) published (1907)
- The river of life (Lord Pembroke) (1870)
- Three Songs, Op. 12 (1873)
- The Poet's Song (1873) (Lord Alfred Tennyson) ( )
- More fond than Cushat Dove (Thomas Ingoldsby)
- Music / when soft voices die (Percy Bysshe Shelley)
Click here to search for this composer on CPDL
Publications by Parry
- Johann Sebastian Bach: The Story of the Development of a Great Personality (1909)
- The Art of Music (1893 and 1896)
- The Music of the Seventeenth Century (1902)
- The Evolution of the Art of Music (1896)
- Oxford History of Music (1907)
- Oxford History of Music - In 6 volumes (1907)
Publications about Parry
- C. Hubert H. Parry - His Life and Music, Jeremy Dibble, Clarendon Press 1992, Oxford England ISBN 0-19-816702-4
- Parry before Jerusalem - Studies of his life and music - Bernard Benoliel, Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., Aldershot, Hampshire
Recordings
- Recording of many of the "English Lyrics" songs: PARRY: ENGLISH LYRICS AND SONGS - Label: Hyperion - Cat: CDA67044 - Date: 12/8/1998 - Distrib: Harmonia Mundi
- Recording of many of the "English Lyrics" songs: Songs by Sir Hubert Parry - Label: Hyperion - Cat: CDA67044 - Date: 12/8/1998 - Distrib: Harmonia Mundi
- Recording of many more of the "English Lyrics" songs: Hyperion - Cat: 34571170442 - Date: 4/1/1999 - "The Songs of Sir Hubert Parry" - Stephen Varcoe, Clifford Benson
- Recording of many more of the "English Lyrics" songs: Decca - Cat: ? - Date: 2002 - "The British Music Collection" - "Sir Hubert Parry" - Waynflete-Singers-Choir
External links
View the Wikipedia article on Charles Hubert Hastings Parry.
- Another C.H.H. Parry biography and music list from The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians
- Lyrics of many of Parry's works from The Lied and Art Song Texts Page
- Remembrance to Parry written in 1918 after his death in "Musical Times"
- CyberHymnal entry for C. H. Parry
- Rehearsal MIDI files of some of Parry's works available from John's downloadable Midi File Choral Music site
- Baroque specialist Andrew Manze hosts an on-line Charles Hubert Hastings Parry party
- Internet Movie Database - films featuring Parry's music.
- Parry as a motoring pioneer.
- Parry's works for the organ
- Parry's "Jerusalem" banned at Southwark Cathedral, England!
- Program notes for "Judith"
- MP3 and Midi of "There rolls the deep" and "Ab Oriente venerunt Magi"
- Some works by Parry are available for download from Google Books, however, this is dependent on your physical location:
- Scanned scores of the English Lyrics from University of Rochester Research