William Byrd: Difference between revisions

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*{{NoCo|Ascendit Deus in jubilatione}}
*{{NoCo|Ascendit Deus in jubilatione}}
*{{NoCo|Aspice Domine quia facta est}}
*{{NoCo|Aspice Domine quia facta est}}
{{mdl|4}}
*{{NoCo|Aspice Domine de sede - Respice Domine}}
*{{NoCo|Aspice Domine de sede - Respice Domine}}
*{{NoCo|Assumpta est Maria}}
*{{NoCo|Assumpta est Maria}}
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*{{NoCo|Benedicta et venerabilis}}
*{{NoCo|Benedicta et venerabilis}}
*{{NoCo|Cantate Domino}}
*{{NoCo|Cantate Domino}}
{{Middle}}
*{{NoCo|Christe qui lux es et dies}}
*{{NoCo|Christe qui lux es et dies}}
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*{{NoCo|Christe qui lux es et dies a4}}
*{{NoCo|Christe qui lux es et dies a4}}
*{{NoCo|Christus resurgens}}
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*{{NoCo|Deo gratias}}
*{{NoCo|Deo gratias}}
*{{NoCo|Descendit de coelis - Et exivit per auream portam}}
*{{NoCo|Descendit de coelis - Et exivit per auream portam}}
*{{NoCo|Deus venerunt gentes - Posuerunt morticinia - Effuderunt sanguinem - Facti sumus opprobrium}}
*{{mdl|4}}
{{NoCo|Deus venerunt gentes - Posuerunt morticinia - Effuderunt sanguinem - Facti sumus opprobrium}}
*{{NoCo|Dies sanctificatus}}
*{{NoCo|Dies sanctificatus}}
*{{NoCo|Diffusa est gratia - Propter veritatem - Vultum tuum}}
*{{NoCo|Diffusa est gratia - Propter veritatem - Vultum tuum}}
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*{{NoCo|Domine secundum multitudinem}}
*{{NoCo|Domine secundum multitudinem}}
*{{NoCo|Domine tu jurasti}}
*{{NoCo|Domine tu jurasti}}
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{{btm}}


===[[Image:Latin.png]] Sacred music in Latin (E-O)===
===[[Image:Latin.png]] Sacred music in Latin (E-O)===

Revision as of 08:17, 2 July 2017

Aliases: If his surviving signatures are a representative sample, the composer's preferred spelling of his own name was "Byrde", although on his own publications it also appears as Bird and Byrd. His contemporaries knew him indiscriminately as Byrd(e), Bird(e) and even Burd(e).

Life

Byrd.jpg

Born: c.1540

Died: 4 July 1623

Biography:
William Byrd was one of the most celebrated English composers in the Renaissance. His entire life was marked by contradictions, and as a true Renaissance man he cannot be easily categorised. He lived until well into the seventeenth century without writing music in the new Baroque fashion, but his superbly constructed keyboard works marked the beginning of the Baroque organ and harpsichord style. Byrd's life is interesting because of his Roman Catholic sympathies combined with his work in the court of the Anglican Queen Elizabeth I. He composed much music, if intermittently, for the Roman Catholic liturgy, particularly in his later years; the two volumes of Gradualia form a prime example. Possibly as a result of this he did not receive widespread recognition in his lifetime, but was very well respected among the Roman Catholic gentry. In the anti-Catholic frenzy following the 1605 Gunpowder Plot, the first volume of the Gradualia, printed by Thomas East in 1605, was banned in England under penalty of imprisonment as indeed was all of his Catholic music; however his Anglican music— such as the Short Service, and the Responses— has been sung in English cathedrals uninterrupted for the past four centuries.

The entry in Cathedral Music, Volume 2 (William Boyce) reads:

William Bird, was admitted a Gentleman of the Chapel Royal in 1569. He, in conjunction with Thomas Tallis, published in 1575 a collection of their own compositions in Latin, entitled, Sacred Songs: and in the Years 1589, 1591, and 1605, he printed three other collections of his own Productions in the same Language, all of which had the same Title with the first conjoint Publication.

His works were, in his own time, in great Repute, both at Home and Abroad, and are still held in general Estimation: His Canon of Non nobis Domine, will, in particular, remain a perpetual Monument to his Memory.--- He died in 1623.

View the Wikipedia article on William Byrd.


List of choral works

Latin.png Sacred music in Latin (A-D)

Deus venerunt gentes - Posuerunt morticinia - Effuderunt sanguinem - Facti sumus opprobrium

Latin.png Sacred music in Latin (E-O)

Latin.png Sacred music in Latin (P-Z)

England.png Sacred music in English

Secular music


Click here to search for this composer on CPDL

Publications (vocal music only)

Contributions to:

External links

There is no single official Byrd website, but a variety of useful resources can be found scattered widely across the Web. Many of these sites still repeat the (almost certainly) incorrect birthdate of 1543.