John Farmer (composer)
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John Farmer (c. 1570 – c. 1601) was a composer of the English Madrigal School. He was born in England around 1570 but his exact date of birth is not known – a 1926 article by Grattan Flood posits a date around 1564 to 1565 based on matriculation records.[1] Farmer was under the patronage of the Earl of Oxford and dedicated his collection of canons and his late madrigal volume to his patron.
In 1595, Farmer was appointed organist and Master of Children at Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin and also, at the same time, organist of St Patrick's Cathedral in Dublin.[2] In 1599, he moved to London and published his only collection of four-part madrigals, that he dedicated to Edward de Vere.
His Lord's Prayer is performed widely throughout many Churches and Cathedrals, mostly in Britain. It is included in Volume 2 of Oxford Choral Classics, published by Oxford University Press.
Giles Farnaby dedicated a pavan to him, included in the Fitzwilliam Virginal Book as Farmer's Paven (no. CCLXXXVII).
Selected works
- Fair Phyllis I Saw Sitting All Alone
- Fair Nymphs, I Heard One Telling
- A Pretty Little Bonny Lass
- Take Time While Time Doth Last
References
- ^ Flood, W. H. Grattan. "New Light on Late Tudor Composers: XV. John Farmer". The Musical Times. 67 (997). doi:10.2307/912508.
- ^ http://www.stpatrickscathedral.ie/organists.htm
External links
- Free scores by John Farmer in the Choral Public Domain Library (ChoralWiki)
- Free scores by John Farmer at the International Music Score Library Project (IMSLP)
- A free recording of a song from Umeå Akademiska Kör
- English madrigal composers
- English organists
- Renaissance composers
- Baroque composers
- 1570 births
- 1601 deaths
- Composers of the Tudor period
- People of the Elizabethan era
- English classical composers
- 16th-century English composers
- 17th-century English composers
- 17th-century classical composers
- English male classical composers
- British composer stubs