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This is a non-diffusing parent category of Category:19th-century Black British musicians and Category:19th-century British male musicians and Category:19th-century British women musicians The contents of these subcategories can also be found within this category, or in diffusing subcategories of it.
Interior of the Canterbury Hall, an early example of a music hall, opened 1852 in Lambeth.. Early British popular music, in the sense of commercial music enjoyed by the people, can be seen to originate in the 16th and 17th centuries with the arrival of the broadside ballad as a result of the print revolution, which were sold cheaply and in great numbers until the 19th century.
John Goss (1800–1880) John Lodge Ellerton (1801–1873) Elias Parish Alvars (1808–1849) Samuel Sebastian Wesley (1810–1876) George Alexander Macfarren (1813–1887) William Christian Sellé (1813–1898) Henry Smart (1813–1879) William Sterndale Bennett (1816–1875) Henry Charles Litolff (1818–1891) Edmund Chipp (1823–1886) Henry ...
Music Hall, Britain's first form of commercial mass entertainment, emerged, broadly speaking, in the mid-19th century, and ended (arguably) after the First World War, when the halls rebranded their entertainment as Variety. [1]
1859: Popular Music of Olden Time, William Chappell (1809–1888) (ed.) 1882: Northumbrian Minstrelsy – A Collection of the Ballads, Melodies and Small-Pipe Tunes of Northumbria, J. Collingwood Bruce (1805–1892) and John Stokoe (eds.) [2] 1882: English and Scottish Popular Ballads, Francis James Child (1825–1896) (ed.)
George Frideric Handel was a leading figure of early 18th-century British music.. Music in the British Isles, from the earliest recorded times until the Baroque and the rise of recognisably modern classical music, was a diverse and rich culture, including sacred and secular music and ranging from the popular to the elite. [1]
British music arrangers (1 C, 55 P) British Asian musicians (3 C, 85 P) B. Black British musicians (10 C, 91 P) British buskers (3 C, 9 P) C. British comedy musicians ...
Edward VI (reigned 1547–1553), first English Protestant monarch; Elizabeth I (reigned 1558–1603), Protestant queen and first Supreme Governor of the Church of England; Harold Godwinson (reigned 6 January 1066 – 14 October 1066), died in Battle of Hastings; Harold Harefoot (reigned 1035–1040) Harthacnut (reigned 1040–1042) Henry I ...