The teares or lamentacions of a sorrowfull soule (William Leighton): Difference between revisions

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* [[Let thy salvation be my joy (Robert Jones)]]
* [[Let thy salvation be my joy (Robert Jones)]]
* [[O Got that no time (Martin Peerson)]]
* [[O Got that no time (Martin Peerson)]]
* [[O Lord how do my woes increase (Orlando Gibbons)]]
* [[O Lord, how do my woes increase (Orlando Gibbons)]]
* [[Most mighty and all knowing Lord (Thomas Weelkes)]]
* [[Most mighty and all-knowing Lord (Thomas Weelkes)]]
* [[O let me tread in the right path (John Ward)]]
* [[O let me tread in the right path (John Ward)]]
* [[I am quite tired with my groans (John Wilbye)]]
* [[I am quite tired with my groans (John Wilbye)]]
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* [[O Lord behold my miseries (John Milton the Elder)]]
* [[O Lord behold my miseries (John Milton the Elder)]]
* [[High mighty God of righteousness (Francis Pilkington)]]
* [[High mighty God of righteousness (Francis Pilkington)]]
* [[O Lord I lift my heart to thee (Orlando Gibbons)]]
* [[O Lord, I lift my heart to Thee (Orlando Gibbons)]]
* [[Well-spring of bounty (Edmund Hooper)]]
* [[Well-spring of bounty (Edmund Hooper)]]
* [[The cause of death is wicked sin (Thomas Lupo)]]
* [[The cause of death is wicked sin (Thomas Lupo)]]
* [[O let me at thy footstool fall (Martin Peerson)]]
* [[O let me at thy footstool fall (Martin Peerson)]]
* [[O Lord how do my woes increase (John Coprario)]]
* [[O Lord how do my woes increase (John Coprario)]]
* [[O happy he whom thou protectst (Thomas Weelkes)]]
* [[O happy he whom thou protect'st (Thomas Weelkes)]]
* [[Out of the deep (Nathaniel Giles)]]
* [[Out of the deep (Nathaniel Giles)]]
* [[Save me O Lord (Robert Johnson)]]
* [[Save me O Lord (Robert Johnson)]]

Revision as of 02:55, 19 August 2013

General Information

Published: 1614

In 1613 the poet and minor composer Sir William Leighton published a book of his own devotional verse entitled The teares or lamentacions of a sorrowfull soule. The following year, having apparently persuaded many of the major English composers of the day to provide settings of his poems, he reissued the collection, now accompanied by the music in table format, under the same title. It is not a particularly good example of Jacobean printing and publishing - far inferior in quality, for example, to most contemporary madrigal- and song-books - but is notable for its inclusion of works accompanied by "broken" or mixed consort, for its dedication to the 14-year-old Prince Charles Stuart, later Charles I of England, and for its inclusion of what may be the last works of William Byrd.

Contents of The teares or lamentacions of a sorrowfull soule

Consort Songs

Songs of 4 Parts

Songs of 5 Parts