Robert Jones: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 126: | Line 126: | ||
<b>A Musicall Dreame</b> (1609) | |||
*Though your strangenes frets my heart | |||
*Sweet Kate of late ranne away | |||
*Once did I serve a cruell heart | |||
*Will said to his Mammy, that he would goe woe | |||
*Harke, harke, wot you what | |||
*My complayning is but faining | |||
*On a time in summers season | |||
*Farewel fond youth, if thou hadst not beene blind | |||
*How should I shew my love unto my love | |||
*O he is gone and I am here | |||
*And is it night, are they thine eyes that shine | |||
*She hath an eye, aye me | |||
*I know not what, yet that I feele is much | |||
*Griefe of my best loves absenting | |||
*If in this flesh where thou indrencht dost lie | |||
*O thred of life when thou art spent | |||
*When I sit reading all alone | |||
*Faine would I speake, but feare to give offence | |||
*In Sherwood livde stout Robin Hood | |||
*Ite Caldi sospiri | |||
*Samor non è che dunque | |||
<b>The Muses Gardin for Delights</b> (1610) | |||
*Love love | |||
*Soft Cupid soft | |||
*Aze I the silly fish beguile | |||
*The fountaines smoake | |||
*Walking by the River side | |||
*I cannot chuse but give a smile | |||
*Joy in thy hopes | |||
*How many New yeeres have growen olde | |||
*There was a shepheard that did live | |||
*The Sea hath many thousand sands | |||
*Once did my thoughts both ebbe and flow | |||
*I am so farre from pittying thee | |||
*As I lay lately in a dreame | |||
*There was a willy ladde | |||
*My father faine would have me take | |||
*My Love hath her true Love betraide | |||
*All my sence thy sweetnesse gained | |||
*To thee deafe Aspe with dying voice | |||
*Behold her lockes like wires of beaten Gold | |||
*Although the Wings of my desire be clipt | |||
*Might I redeeme mine errors with mine eyes | |||
</td> | </td> | ||
</tr></table> | </tr></table> | ||
Line 149: | Line 191: | ||
*[http://www.hoasm.org/IVM/JonesR2.html Short biography from HOASM]<br> | *[http://www.hoasm.org/IVM/JonesR2.html Short biography from HOASM]<br> | ||
*[http://www.kulturserver.de/home/harald-lillmeyer/Texte/Downloads/Downloads.html Texts of five of his publications, with some midi files | *[http://www.kulturserver.de/home/harald-lillmeyer/Texte/Downloads/Downloads.html Texts of five of his publications, with some midi files (copyright)]<br> | ||
*[http://home.att.ne.jp/blue/patchan/NewJones/RosseterJones.html Another site, with information about Philip Rosseter | *[http://home.att.ne.jp/blue/patchan/NewJones/RosseterJones.html Another site, also with information about Philip Rosseter] | ||
Revision as of 22:48, 24 March 2006
Life
Born: 1577
Died: 01 January 1615
Biography
View the Wikipedia article on Robert Jones.
List of choral works
ICON | SOURCE |
---|---|
File details | |
Help |
Click here to search for composer on ChoralWiki
Publications
- The First Booke of Songes or Ayres of foure parts with Tableture for the Lute. So made that all the parts together, or either of them severally may be song to the Lute, Orpherian or Viol de gambo. (1600)
- The Second Booke of Songs and Ayres, set out to the Lute, the base Violl the playne way, or the Base by tableture after the leero fashion. (1601)
- Ultimum Vale, with a triplicity of Musicke, Whereof The first part is for the Lute, the Voyce and the Viole Degambo, The 2.part is for the Lute, the Viole, and foure partes to sing, The third part is for two Trebles, to sing either to the Lute, or the Viole or to both, if any please. (1605 - not 1608 as often claimed)
- The First Set of Madrigals, of 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Parts, for Viols and Voices, or for Voices alone, or as you please. (1607)
- A Musicall Dreame. Or The Fourth Booke of Ayres, the First part is for the Lute, two Voyces, and the Viole de Gambo; The Second part is for the Lute, the Viole and foure Voices to Sing: The Third part is for one Voyce alone, or to the Lute, the Basse Viole, or to both if you please, Whereof, two are Italian Ayres. (1609)
- The Muses Gardin for Delights, Or the fift Booke of Ayres, onely for the Lute, the Base-vyoll, and the Voyce. (1610)
Contributions to:
- The Triumphs of Oriana (1601), compiled by Thomas Morley
- The Teares and Lamentatacions of a Sorrowfull Soule (1614), compiled by Sir William Leighton
Ultimum Vale is considered the third book of 'ayres'.
The First Set of Madrigals was the only set ever published. Only the Cantus and Bassus partbooks survive.
List of works by publication
ICON | SOURCE |
---|---|
File details | |
Help |
The First Booke of Songes or Ayres (1600)
|
The First Set of Madrigals (1607)
|
Contributions to other works
The Teares and Lamentatacions of a Sorrowfull Soule (1614), compiled by Sir William Leighton
- 22. Let thy salvation be my joy
- 28. What shall I render
- 47. Lament, Lament, My Soul, Cry, O Cry