William Leighton: Difference between revisions

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'''Biography'''<br>
'''Biography'''<br>
Sir William Leighton was an Elizabethan composer and editor who published ''The Teares and Lamentatacions of a Sorrowfull Soule'' (1614) which comprised 55 pieces by 21 composers (among them [[John Bull]], [[William Byrd]], [[John Dowland]] and [[Martin Peerson]]), including eight by himself. The book is historically important because it has parts for an instrumental accompaniment of broken consort and introduces the term "consort song".
Sir William Leighton was an Elizabethan composer and editor who published ''The Teares and Lamentatacions of a Sorrowfull Soule'' (1614) which comprised 55 pieces by 21 composers (among them [[John Bull]], [[William Byrd]], [[John Dowland]] and [[Martin Peerson]]), including eight by himself. The book is historically important because it has parts for an instrumental accompaniment of broken consort and introduces the term "consort song".
{{WikipediaLink2}}
{{WikipediaLink2}}


==Settings of his literary works==
==Musical settings of literary works==
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{{LyricistSettingsList|cols=2}}


==Publications==
==Publications==


==External links==
==External links==
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''add web links here''


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[[Category:Lyricists]]
[[Category:Lyricists]]

Revision as of 01:17, 2 November 2019

Life

Born: c. 1565

Died: 1622

Biography
Sir William Leighton was an Elizabethan composer and editor who published The Teares and Lamentatacions of a Sorrowfull Soule (1614) which comprised 55 pieces by 21 composers (among them John Bull, William Byrd, John Dowland and Martin Peerson), including eight by himself. The book is historically important because it has parts for an instrumental accompaniment of broken consort and introduces the term "consort song".

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Musical settings of literary works

Settings of text by William Leighton

Publications

External links

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