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This page is only for complete editions and multiple selections from the collection here. For arrangements, new editions, etc. see (or create) separate pages for individual works linked in the General Information section below. |
Performances
Naxos
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Sheet Music
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General Information
Work Title
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100 Songs of England
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Alternative. Title
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One Hundred Songs of England
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Composer
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Bantock, Granville
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I-Catalogue NumberI-Cat. No.
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None [force assignment]
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Movements/SectionsMov'ts/Sec's
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100 songs
- Sumer is icumen in
- Ah! The sighs that come fro' my heart
- The Three Ravens
- The King's hunt
- The Hawthorn tree
- Westron wynde
- The woods so wild
- Chevy Chace
- Of all the birds, from Deuteromelia (Ravenscroft, Thomas)
- We be three poor mariners
- By a bank as I lay
- The Carman's whistle
- The British grenadiers
- Come, live with me and be my love
- Greensleeves
- Once I loved a maiden fair
- You gentlemen of England
- Early one morning
- Love me little, love me long
- Pretty Polly Oliver
- Begone, dull care!
- There was a jolly miller
- The Barley-mow
- Barbara Allen
- The Leather bottel
- John Peel
- The Oak and the ash
- Love will find out the way
- With jockey to the fair
- Down among the dead men
- The Bailiff's daughter of Islington
- King Arthur
- The Cheshire man
- The Derby ram
- The Lincolnshire poacher
- Ward the pirate
- The Barkshire tragedy
- The Vly is on the turmut
- The Plough-boy
- Lord Rendal
- Widdicombe fair
- Byrd: O mistress mine
- Byrd: I thought that Love had been a boy
- Weelkes: Cease, sorrows, now
- Morley: It was a lover and his lass
- Morley: Now is the month of maying
- Johnson: As I walked forth
- Johnson: Dear, do not your fair beauty wrong
- Dowland: Awake, sweet love
- Dowland: Now, O now, I needs must part
- Dowland: Come again
- Campion: Shall I come, sweete Love, to thee
- Campion: Never weather-beaten sail
- Campion: There is a garden in her face
- Wilbye: Flora gave me fairest flowers
- Bennet: Weep, O mine eyes
- Rosseter: If she forsake me
- Ford: Since first I saw your face
- Lawes: Gather your rosebuds
- Gibbons: The Silver swan
- Lawes: Bid me to live
- Savile: Here's a health unto His Majesty
- Locke: My lodging it is on the cold ground
- Humfrey: I pass all my hours (The Phoenix)
- Humfrey: O the sad day!
- Blow: Tell me no more
- Blow: It is not that I love you less (The Self-banished)
- Purcell: I attempt from love's sickness to fly
- Purcell: Nymphs and Shepherds
- Purcell: I'll sail upon the dog-star
- Purcell: Dido's song
- Purcell: Mad Bess
- Purcell: What shall I do?
- Leveridge: The Roast beef of old England
- Leveridge: Black-eyed Susan
- Arne: Under the greenwood tree
- Arne: Blow, blow, thou winter wind
- Arne: When daisies pied
- Arne: Tell me where is fancy bred
- Arne: Where the bee sucks
- Linley: Here's to the maiden
- Jackson: What shepherd or nymph of the grove?
- Jackson: To fairest Delia's grassy tomb
- Dibdin: Blow high, blow low
- Dibdin: Yo, heave ho!
- Dibdin: Then farewell, my trim-built wherry
- Dibdin: Tom Bowling
- Dibdin: The jolly young waterman
- Hook: The Lass of Richmond Hill
- R.J.S. Stevens: Sigh no more, ladies
- Davy: The Bay of Biscay
- Dibdin: The Death of Nelson
- Colonel R. Mellish: Drink to me only
- Horn: Cherry ripe
- Horn: I've been roaming
- Bishop: Bid me discourse
- Bishop: Should he upbraid
- Bishop: Love has eyes
- Bishop: The Dashing white sergeant
- J.A. Wade: Meet me by moonlight
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First Publication.
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1914
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Librettist
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see below
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Language
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English
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Composer Time PeriodComp. Period
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Early 20th century
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Piece Style
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Romantic
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Instrumentation
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voice, piano (some are arrangements)
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Navigation etc.
Some of these are arrangements, presumably by Bantock, as the originals of the earlier works would have been with harpsichord, or other early keyboard, accompaniment, and some may have been from theatrical works, with orchestral accompaniment.