Lyra Viol Composers



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Ford's Musicke of Sundrie Kindes (London, 1607) is in two parts, dedicated respectively to Sir Richard Weston of Skreens, Roxwell, Essex, and to Sir Richard Tichborne. Among the ayres are such famous pieces as What then is love, sings Coridon, Faire sweet cruell, Since first I saw your face and There is a ladie, sweet and kind. The ayres are given alternative four-part vocal settings. The lyra viol duets include M. Southcote's Paven with its galliard (MB, ix); other titles that might help to identify the circle in which Ford moved at this stage in his life are The baggepipes: Sir Charles Howard's delight, and Snatch and away: Sir John Paulet's toy. Some pieces contain indications of a pizzicato technique common in lyra viol playing: ‘thumpe them with the first and second finger of the left hand according to the direction of the pricks’.

Ford contributed two anthems to Sir William Leighton's Teares or Lamentacions of a Sorrowfull Soule (RISM 16147) and a large number of three-part songs (ATB) both sacred and secular survive in manuscript, notably at Winchester College and Christ Church, Oxford. A number require the support of a basso continuo (missing from the set in GB-Och). Also in manuscript are some six-part anthems and madrigals, including 'Tis now dead night, a ‘Passion on the Death of Prince Henry’. Ford's viol music includes six fine five-part fantasias (anonymous in Lbl Add.17792–6, but ascribed to him in Lcm 1145).

Although Ford’s work in the context of his time has not yet been authoritively assessed, it is possible to say that the music merits better than its present relative obscurity. Hsieh has written of the anthems – perhaps the least well-known works – that some ‘are equal to the works of the most eminent composers of the period’. The lute-songs, such as the delicately elegant Since first I saw your face, rank with the best in a genre not lacking in great works. The lyra viol duets are so finely idiomatic as to suggest that Ford must have been an excellent performer; the depth of expression and originality of one like the Pauin, M. Maynes Choice show him to have been a composer of true inspiration.
WORKS
19 anthems, 3–6vv, 16147, GB-DRc, Lbl, Llp, Ob, Och, Ojc, US-NYp; 2 ed. in EECM, xi (1970), 34, 146
4 sacred canons, 165210
Musicke of Sundrie Kindes, 4vv, insts (London, 1607/R); songs ed. in EL, 1st ser., iii (1921, 2/1966); 2 lyra viol duets, ed. in MB, ix (1955, 2/1962), 205, 206
35 partsongs, 3vv, GB-Och [bc lost], WCc
6 fantasias a 5, Ckc, Lbl, Lcm, Ob; 1 ayre a 4, Lbl, IRL-Dm; 1 almaine a 3, GB-Och; Fa mee fa, 2 b viols, Ob
BIBLIOGRAPHY
AshbeeR, i, iii–v
BDECM
MeyerECM
C.S. Emden: ‘Lives of Elizabethan Song Composers: some New Facts’, Review of English Studies, ii (1926), 416–22
W.L. Woodfill: Musicians in English Society from Elizabeth to Charles I (Princeton, NJ, 1953/R)
F. Traficante: ‘Music for the Lyra Viol: the Printed Sources’, LSJ, viii (1966), 7–24; repr. in JVdGSA, v (1968), 16–33
F. Hsieh: The Anthems of Thomas Ford (ca. 1580–1648) (diss., Louisiana State U., 1989)

IAN SPINK/FRANK TRAFICANTE


© Oxford University Press 2004
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Gerrarde, Gervise
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Goodall, Stephen
Chaplain at Christ Church, died c. 1637
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Gregory, Thomas

(fl ?early–mid-17th century). English composer. He may be the ‘Mr Gregory’ referred to in some sources. No connection between him and the Gregorys who worked at the English court has been found. His compositions are short and typically in the dance forms of the time, such as almain, coranto and saraband. Six lyra viol duets appear with titles: The Changes (GB-Ob), The Chiscake (Ob), Loath to Depart (Ob), Rice Davies Maske (both parts survive; IRL-Dm, GB-Ob, US-LAuc), Tom of Bedlam (IRL-Dm, GB-Lbl, US-LAuc) and Williams his Maske (IRL-Dm, GB-Ob). Not all attributions are certain because works ascribed to Thomas Gregory in certain sources are attributed differently in others. Little remains, then, on which to base a valid opinion of his talent or musical style. The survival of his works in 15 manuscript and printed sources suggests that his music was valued in its time.


WORKS
81 pieces (78 for 2 lyra viols (71 inc., only 1 pt extant), 3 for 1 lyra viol), 161725, 162119, 16696, IRL-Dm, GB-Cu, Cheshire County Records Office, Chester, Lbl, Mp, Ob, Lspencer, S-N, US-LAuc
BIBLIOGRAPHY
AshbeeR
DoddI
F. Traficante: The Mansell Lyra Viol Tablature [US-LAuc M286 M4 L992] (diss., U. of Pittsburgh, 1965)
J. Sawyer: An Anthology of Lyra Viol Music in Oxford, Bodleian Library, Manuscripts Music School d245–7 (thesis, U. of Toronto, 1972)
A. Ashbee: ‘Instrumental Music from the Library of John Browne (1608–1691), Clerk of the Parliaments’, ML, lviii (1977), 43–59
P. Furnas: The ‘Manchester Gamba’ Book [GB-Mp BrM832 Vu51]: a Primary Source of Ornaments for the Lyra Viol (diss., Stanford U., 1978)

FRANK TRAFICANTE


© Oxford University Press 2004
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Hingeston [Hingston], John

(bYork, c1606; bur. London, 17 Dec 1683). English organist, composer and viol player. He was the son of Thomas Hingeston, vicar-choral of York Minster and rector of St Lawrence, York. His name appears in two lists of York Minster choristers dating from 1618–19. On 17 March 1620 he was hired by the Yorkshire nobleman Francis Clifford, 4th Earl of Cumberland, to play ‘upon the organs’. Within a year he had joined the Clifford household and was formally apprenticed to the earl in August 1621. A month later he was sent to London to study with Orlando Gibbons, returning to Yorkshire some time before February 1625. He remained in the Clifford household until 1645.

Hingeston’s career flourished during the Commonwealth period. He is listed in Playford’s Musicall Banquet (RISM 16516) as one of nine ‘excellent and able masters’ for the organ and virginal. He became organist to Oliver Cromwell shortly after the establishment of the protectoral household in April 1654, and was placed in charge of ‘his Highness Musique’, a band of eight musicians and two boys. In February 1657 he petitioned the Council for the Advancement of Musick, seeking the incorporation of a college with powers to regulate the practice of music and the reappropriation of funds enjoyed by royal musicians under Charles I. At the Restoration he was appointed as a viol player in the King’s Private Musick and Keeper of His Majesty’s Wind Instruments. He also became warden and deputy marshall of the revived Westmin

ster Corporation of Music. At his death his pupils included his nephew Peter Hingeston, John Blagrave and Henry Purcell.



Hingeston’s works deserve to be better known. His consort music for viols and violins is mainly preserved in a set of partbooks (GB-Ob Mus.Sch.D.205–11) that he presented to the Oxford Music School between 1661 and 1682, and in a related autograph organbook (Ob Mus.Sch.E.382) acquired by the university some time after his death. 26 of the fantasia-suites contained in these sources are modelled on the three-movement sets of Coprario, William Lawes and John Jenkins. Mr. Hingston’s Consort comprises three four-movement dance suites (pavin–almande–corant–saraband), identical in form to Locke’s Little Consort (dated 1651 in an autograph score in GB-Lbl Add 17801), and the fantasia-suites for two basses are similar in style to Locke’s duos of 1652. The fantasias and airs for three bass viols, which probably date from Hingeston’s employment in the Private Musick, are unusual in their scoring for three equal instruments. He wrote the fantasia-suites and multi-movement dance suites for cornetts and sackbuts for the Protectorate court. Most of his wind music is in an incomplete set of partbooks (Lv) dating from the Commonwealth period and bound with Cromwell’s personal coat of arms.
WORKS
2 anthems: Blessed be the Lord my strength, Withdraw not thy mercy, music lost, words in J. Clifford, The Divine Services and Anthems (London, 2/1664)
172 dances, cornetts, sackbuts, GB-Lv (2 sackbut pts only)
27 fantasia-suites, Ob: 9 for vn, b viol, org; 6 for 2 vn, b viol, org; 4 for 2 b viols; 2 for 5 viols (2 tr, 2 t, b, org); 1 for vn, b viol, org (org pt only); 1 for vn, b viol, pedal hpd/org (org pt only); 2 for 3 viols (tr, t, b), org (1 inc., org pt only); 1 for 2 viols (tr, b); 1 for 2 cornetts, sackbut, org
2 fantasia-suites, cornetts, sackbuts, Lv (2 sackbut pts only)
1 fantasia-suite, cornett, sackbut, org, Lv (sackbut pt only), Ob
36 fantasia-almande pairs, Ob: 8 for 4 viols/vns (2 tr, 2 b), org; 8 for 3 viols (tr, t, b), org; 8 for 3 viols (2 tr, b), org; 6 for 3 viols (tr, 2 b), org (org pt only); 3 for 6 viols (2 tr, 2 t, 2 b), org; 2 for 5 viols (2 tr, 2 t, b), org; 1 for 2 tr, 2 b, org (org pt only)
18 fantasias and airs (incl. 2 settings of the same almande), 3 b viols, Lbl
1 fantasia, 3 viols (2 tr, b), org, Ob
1 set of divisions, b viol, Lcm
Mr Hingston’s Consort, tr and b viols, virginal/org, BEcr (b pt only)
Voluntary, org, Och
BIBLIOGRAPHY
AshbeeR, i, v, viii
BDECM
DoddI
E.W. Bock:The String Fantasies of John Hingeston c.1610–1683 (diss., U. of Iowa, 1956)
L. Hulse: ‘John Hingeston’,Chelys, xii (1983), 23–42
C.D.S. Field: ‘Consort Music I: Up to 1660’, The Seventeenth Century, ed. I Spink (Oxford, 1992), 197–244
P. Holman: ‘“Evenly, Softly, and Sweetly Acchording to All”: the Organ Accompaniment of English Consort Music’, John Jenkins and his Time: Studies in English Consort Music, ed. A. Ashbee and P. Holman (Oxford, 1996), 354–82
L. Hulse: ‘Musical Apprenticeship in Noble Households’, ibid., 75–88

LYNN HULSE


© Oxford University Press 2004
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Holst, Daniel
Airs for lyra viol from
S-L MS G.28
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Hotman [Autheman, Haultemant, Hautman, Otteman], Nicolas

(b Brussels, before 1614; d Paris, April 1663). French composer, viol and theorbo player and lutenist of Flemish birth. He moved to Paris by 1626, when he received letters of naturalization. In 1632 he was described as ‘maître joueur de luth’, and in 1635–6 Mersenne (Harmonicorum libri ) praised Maugars and Hotman as the two leading viol virtuosos. Annibal Gantez, in L'entretien des musiciens (1643), singled him out among Parisian musicians skilled on both the lute and the viol. Hotman sent Constantijn Huygens viol and theorbo pieces in 1659, which the latter ridiculed to Henry Du Mont, but others in the Low Countries must have valued his works: three manuscripts copied in Utrecht in the 1660s contain 26 of his pieces for viol and eight for theorbo. He and Sebastien Le Camus became treble viol and theorbo players at court in 1661, replacing Louis Couperin. Hotman's viol pupils included Machy and Sainte-Colombe; he thus initiated an illustrious line of French viol players and composers which included the Marais family and perhaps the Forquerays and Caix d'Hervelois.

Hotman was one of the most successful of the versatile instrumentalists favoured in French court and aristocratic circles; he wrote for voices, viol, lute and theorbo. The pieces for viol exhibit an elegance of melody and phrase structure similar to that in the music of Chambonnières, with a balance of both textures appropriate to the viol: ‘jeu d'harmonie’, inherited from lute music, and the vocally derived ‘jeu de mélodie’. His Airs à boire were published posthumously by Ballard in 1664. A 1667 inventory of his effects included two bass viols, a treble viol, three theorbos and a lute.
WORKS
Airs à boire à 3 parties (Paris, 1664)
2 préludes, 12 allemandes, 6 courantes, 7 sarabandes, 10 gigues, 4 ballets, 1 bouré, 1 boutade, b viol; 1 courante, 1 sarabande, 2 b viols; 1 prélude, 3 allemandes, 3 courantes, 2 sarabandes, 2 gigues, 1 chaconne, theorbo; 1 courante, lute; principal sources A-ETgoëss, F-B, Pn, GB-Ob, PL-Wtm
BIBLIOGRAPHY
DoddI
Y. de Brossard: ‘La vie musicale en France d'après Loret et ses continuateurs (1650–1688)’, RMFC, x (1970), 117–94
H. Bol: La basse de viole du temps de Marin Marais et d'Antoine Forqueray (Bilthoven, 1973)
F. Moureau: ‘Nicolas Hotman: bourgeois de Paris et musicien’, RMFC, xiii (1973), 5–22
D. Beecher: ‘Aesthetics of the French Solo Viol Repertory, 1650–1680’, JVdGSA, xxiv (1987), 10–21

STUART CHENEY


© Oxford University Press 2004
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Hudson, George

(d London, 10 Dec 1672). English viol player, violinist and composer. Anthony Wood thought he was originally a dancing-master, but he is first heard of on 3 December 1641, when he was sworn in as an extraordinary member of the court ‘lutes and voices’. He was listed in Playford's Musicall Banquet (RISM 16516) as one of the ‘excellent and able Masters’ available in London for teaching ‘Voyce or Viole’, and in 1656 he composed instrumental music for two of Davenant's musical productions. In 1660 he inherited Stephen Nau's place for ‘the composition and practice’ of the royal violin band, though his position as one of the directors of the group, now enlarged as the Twenty-Four Violins, was usurped by John Banister after 1662. He was an active member of the Corporation of Musick, and served as its warden several times. He made his will on 10 December 1672, and died the same day. A portrait of him is in the Oxford Music Faculty.

Wood wrote that Hudson was ‘Excellent at the lyra-viol and hath improved it by his excellent inventions’. The manuscript containing his suite for violin, lyra viol, bass and keyboard seems to be partly autograph, and was probably brought to Sweden in 1653 by musicians attending Bulstrode Whitelocke's embassy to Queen Christina's court. The three songs in Playford's Catch that Catch Can and The Musical Companion are by ‘G.H.’, and one of them, Credo non poco, is entitled ‘Mr George Hudsons Waytes’ in a manuscript copy (GB-Eu DC.I.69). He was a competent if unadventurous composer who seems to have confined himself to the lighter genres. None of the music he must have written for the Twenty-Four Violins survives, at least not in its orchestral form.

The violinist Richard Hudson (b 1617/18; bur. London, 17 Feb 1668) was probably George's brother. He was one of the musicians in Cromwell's household (c1656–8) and was among those who petitioned the Council for the Advancement of Musick on 19 February 1657 for the establishment of a music college. At the Restoration he joined the Twenty-Four Violins and was made keeper of the court lutes and viols; in March 1666 he was paid for ‘mending and altering’ instruments ‘broken upon removes’. He died from ‘a fall in a ditch’.


WORKS
23 pieces, lyra viol, 16516, 16527, 16696, D-Kl, IRL-Dm, F-Pc, GB-Lbl, Mp, Ob
30 pieces, tr, b, 16555, Lbl, Mch, Ob, Och
3 songs, 3vv, 16676, 16734
22 pieces, 2 tr, b, Ob, Och
Suite, g, vn, lyra viol, b, kbd, S-Uu, ed. I.H. Stoltzfus (Ottawa, 1981)
3 songs, 3vv, 16676, 16734
3 suites, c, d, F, a 3, GB-Och
 
Instrumental music for: The First Dayes Entertainment (W. Davenant), 1656; The Siege of Rhodes (op, Davenant), 1656, all music lost
BIBLIOGRAPHY
AshbeeR , i, iii, v, viii
BDA
BDECM
Day-MurrieESB
DoddI
J.D. Shute: Anthony à Wood and his Manuscript Wood D 19(4) at the Bodleian (diss., International Institute of Advanced Studies, Clayton, MO, 1979), i, 175
I.H. Stoltzfus: ‘The Lyra Viol in Consort: An Example from Uppsala, Universitetsbiblioteket IMhs 4:3’, JVdGSA, xvii (1980), 47–59
A. Ashbee: ‘A Not Unapt Scholar: Bulstrode Whitelocke (1605–1675)’, Chelys, xi (1982), 24–31
L. Hulse: ‘John Hingeston’, Chelys, xii (1983), 23–42
P. Holman: Four and Twenty Fiddlers: the Violin at the English Court 1540–1690 (Oxford, 1993, 2/1995)

PETER HOLMAN


© Oxford University Press 2004
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•••
Hume, Tobias

(b ?c1579; d London, 16 April 1645). English composer and viol player. As a professional soldier he served as an officer in the Swedish and Russian armies, and as a viol player published two important volumes of music, principally for the Lyra viol. When in 1629 he entered the Charterhouse almshouse he was probably 50 (the minimum age of admission); he later died there.

The profession of arms, his vivid and personal literary style, his insistence that the viol ‘shall with ease yeelde full various and as devicefull Musicke as the Lute’, and the fact that most of his music, being in tablature, is inaccessible to most modern musicians, have been the cause both of modern neglect of Hume as a composer of talent, and of his reputation as a musical eccentric.

What is remarkable is that Hume regarded himself primarily as a soldier: ‘I doe not studie Eloquence, or professe Musicke, although I doe love Sense, and affect Harmony: My Profession being, as my Education hath beene, Armes, the onely effeminate part of me, hath beene Musicke; which in mee hath beene alwayes Generous, because never Mercenarie’. Hume's addresses to the reader herald a new vigour that the 17th-century pamphleteers were to bring to English prose; his claim for the viol as a worthy rival to the lute as a solo, an ensemble and a continuo instrument, was an accurate forecast of change in English musical taste.

All of Hume's known compositions are contained in his First Part of Ayres (1605) and Captaine Humes Poeticall Musicke (1607), the former constituting the largest repertory of solo music for the lyra viol by a single composer in the early 17th century. Together, these works comprise instrumental dances, pieces with descriptive, fanciful or humorous titles, programmatic pieces and songs. Hume's First Part of Ayres contains what may be the earliest examples of pizzicato: ‘play one straine with your fingers, the other with your Bow’, ‘to be plaide with your fingers … your Bow ever in your hand’ and col legno: ‘Drum this with the back of your Bow’. This book includes a number of playfully suggestive titles – My Mistresse hath a prettie thing, She loves it well and Hit it in the middle – as well as a Lesson for two to play upon one Viole which requires one player to sit in the lap of the other. His second collection, dedicated to Queen Anne, is more staid in tone; it earned for the composer ‘according to her highnes comandment and pleasure [by warrant, 6 June 1607]: 100 s[hillings]’. While making no great technical demands on the performer, the music displays much skill and invention, both in the exploitation of the potential of the viol and in the effectiveness and the variety of sonorities in the ensemble works.

WORKS


The First Part of Ayres, French, Pollish and others together … with Pavines, Galliards, and Almaines (London, 1605/R); 3 songs, v, lyra viol, ed. in EL, 2nd ser., xxi (1969), 8 inst. works ed. in MB, ix (1955, 2/1962)

Captaine Humes Poeticall Musicke … so contrived, that it may he plaied 8. severall waies upon sundry Instruments with much facilitie (London, 1607/R); 1 song, v, 3 viols, ed. in EL, 2nd ser., xxi (1969), 3 works, 3–4 viols, ed. in MB, ix (1955, 2/1962)


BIBLIOGRAPHY


AshbeeR iv
T. Hume:  The True Petition of Colonel Hume, as it was Presented to the Lords Assembled in the High Court of Paliament (London, 1642)
F. Traficante:  ‘Music for the Lyra Viol: the Printed Sources’, LSJ, viii (1966), 7–24; repr. in JVdGSA, v (1968), 16–33
W. Sullivan:  Tobias Hume's ‘First Part of Ayres’ 1605 (diss., U. of Hawaii, 1967); serialized in JVdGSA, v (1968), 5–15; vi (1969), 13–33; vii (1970), 92–111; viii (1971), 64–93; ix (1972), 16–37
K. Nemann:  ‘Captain Hume's Invention for Two to Play upon One Viole’, JAMS, xxii (1969), 101–6
C. Harris:  A Study and Partial Transcription of ‘The First Part of Ayres’ by Tobias Hume (diss., U. of London, 1971)
C. Harris:  ‘Thomas Hume, a Short Biography’, Chelys, iii (1971), 16–18
C. Harris:  ‘The Viol Lyra-Way’, Chelys, iv (1972), 17–21

MICHAEL MORROW, COLETTE HARRIS/FRANK TRAFICANTE


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Ives [Ive, Ivy], Simon

(bap. Ware, Herts., 20 July 1600; d London, 1 July 1662). English string player, singer and composer. He was probably the ‘Simon a musician boy’ who was taught by Innocent Lanier in the Cecil household (Hatfield House) in 1609. He may also have been associated with Sir Henry Fanshawe's household at Ware Park, where John Ward worked between about 1607 and 1616; there are several connections between the music of the two composers. He had relatives in Earl’s Colne, Essex, was living there in 1625, and may be the ‘Simon  Ive’ who became a supernumerary Groom of the Chamber at court in April 1630. Shirley’s masque The Triumph of Peace, to which he contributed music, was given by the Inns of Court (1634), and some of the dedications of his lyra viol pieces suggest he moved in London's legal circles. He also wrote songs for Henrietta Maria's visit to Thomas Bushell's estate at Enstone on 23 August 1636; their texts were published that year in Oxford. About that time he contributed a story to Sir Nicholas Le Strange's Merry Passages and Jests; another story in the collection concerns his friendship with the poet Francis Quarles.

He became a London wait for ‘song and music’ in 1637 and was still serving in 1645. According to Anthony Wood, he was ‘a singing man in the Cath[edral] Ch[urch] of St Paul in London and a teacher of musick before the Rebellion broke out, after it did break out [he] left his singing mans place, and stuck to his instruction in musick w[hi]ch kept him in a comfortable condition’. He may have taught Anne Cromwell, the protector's first cousin, whose virginal book contains at least 12 pieces by him, and he is listed as one of Susanna Perwich's teachers in John Batchiler's The Virgin's Pattern (London, 1661). In 1661 he became a minor prebendary of St Paul's. In his will he left his colleagues a chest of nine viols (five trebles, three tenors and a bass) by Thomas Aldred, a bass viol made by his servant Muskett, and a ‘set of Fancies and Innomines of my owne Composition of foure five and six partes’.

Ive's vocal music mostly consists of convivial catches or simple dance songs, though the dialogue Shepherd, well met, I prithee tell shows that he was capable of deeper things. He also wrote fine three-part elegies on the death of William Lawes and the barrister and writer William Austin (d 1634). Anthony Wood wrote that he was ‘excellent at the Lyra-Viol and improved it by excellent inventions’; about 90 pieces for one, two and three lyra viols survive, though some of the solos and duets probably have missing parts, and some of the constituent parts of the duets and trios actually circulated as solos. His bass viol duets are in the tuneful, dance-like idiom established by Ward. The 25 four-part dances, which appear as a set in the British Library, may have been put together for musicians at the Blackfriars Theatre. They include arrangements of pieces by Ward, ‘J.L.’ (? Innocent Lanier) and ‘H.B.’ (? Hieronymus or Jerome Bassano), as well as a version of the famous coranto that Bulstrode Whitelocke composed with Ives's help; Whitelocke wrote in his memoirs that it was first played by the Blackfriars musicians, and that they struck it up every time he came to the theatre. Ives has been overshadowed by Lawes and Jenkins as a consort composer, though his dances and fantasias are consistently graceful, tuneful and attractive.


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