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Pages in category "17th-century songs" ... A new loyal song, upon King William's Progress into Ireland ... Tis A Plaine Case Gentlemen; The Two Sisters (folk song) W.
A Book of Ayres, 1601, with words by Campion and music by Philip Rosseter. The body of his works is considerable, the earliest known being a group of five anonymous poems included in the "Songs of Divers Noblemen and Gentlemen", appended to Newman's edition of Sir Philip Sidney's Astrophel and Stella, which appeared in 1591.
The four movements were based on six short dances for solo guitar by the 17th-century Spanish composer Gaspar Sanz and were taken from a three-volume work (1674, 1675, 1697) that is now commonly known as Instrucción de música sobre la guitarra española (Musical Instruction on the Spanish Guitar) (Donis 2005:75). Most of the movements retain ...
In the 17th century, in Titles of Honour (1614), the jurist John Selden said that the title gentleman likewise speaks of "our English use of it" as convertible with nobilis (nobility by rank or personal quality) [5] and describes the forms of a man's elevation to the nobility in European monarchies. [2]
Pages in category "17th century in music" The following 94 pages are in this category, out of 94 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. 0–9. 1601 in music;
Damascene composed numerous songs, many of which were published in the various musical miscellanies of the day, such as Choice Ayres and Songs, 1676–84; The Theatre of Musick, 1685–7; Vinculum Societatis, 1687–91; The Banquet of Musick, 1688–92; Comes Amoris, 1687–94; and The Gentleman's Journal, 1692–4.
This is a list of chaconnes composed in the 17th century. Included are all pieces of 17th-century music, or clearly marked off sections of pieces, labeled "chaconne" (or some variant of that word) by their composers, that have been found by contributors to this article among the works of musicians, musicologists, and music historians.
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