Movements/SectionsMov'ts/Sec's
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see below
- Book 1
- Henry Purcell - Tho' you make no return to my passion, from The Maid's Last Prayer
- Henry Purcell - Tell me no more, from The Maid's Last Prayer
- Samuel Akeroyde - 'Tis pity Myrtilla you should be a wife
- Samuel Akeroyde - Beauty first the heart inspires
- Raphael Courteville - To convent streams or shady groves
- Robert King - Catch for 3 voices. Jack, whither so fast?
- Samuel Akeroyde - Ah friends how happy are we
- Robert King - What beastly to drink!
- Nicholas Staggins - Tell me thou fairest of all thy whole sex
- Thomas Tollett - Such command o'er my fate
- Samuel Akeroyde - That scornful Silvia's chains I wear
- Samuel Akeroyde - Why wonders beauteous Cloris
- (Henry Purcell) - Fye Jocky never prattle meer so like a loon, from The Richmond Heiress
- Samuel Akeroyde - Fond virgins run into the snare
- Samuel Akeroyde - The Queen of Beauty loved a swain
- Henry Purcell - Of noble race was Shinking, from The Richmond Heiress
- Unattributed - To yonder sweet delicious shade
- Raphael Courteville - Where Phæbus with his kindest look
- John Barrett - I wonder what those lovers mean
- Robert King - A Scotch Song. Ere time had run so long a race
- Henry Purcell - And in each track of glory since
- Robert King - How long must women wish in vain
- Unattributed - 14 untitled tunes for 2 treble instruments, including:
- attr. Robert King - untitled air
- attr. Robert King - untitled air
- attr. Robert King - untitled air
- attr. Robert King - untitled air
- attr. Robert King - untitled air
- attr. Robert King - untitled air
- attr. Robert King - untitled air
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- attr. John Banister - untitled air
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- unattributed - untitled air
- unattributed - untitled air
- Henry Purcell - Catch for 3 voices. Down, down with Bacchus
- Book 2
- Henry Purcell - Sawney is a bonney bonney lad, from The Prince of Baden
- John Eccles - Young I am and yet unskill'd, from Love Triumphant
- Gottfried Finger - Think not sighs or tears can move
- Henry Hall - Enchanted by your voice
- Robert King - 'Tis love that always strikes the fire
- Henry Purcell - Cinthia frowns when e'er I woo her, from The Double Dealer
- Mr Bowman - Ancient Phillis has young graces, from The Double Dealer
- Robert King - When on her eyes
- Henry Hall - In vain, in vain my fair Silvia
- Henry Hall - While, Galathea, you design to gain a conquest
- Henry Purcell - When first I saw the bright Aurelia's eyes, from Diocletian
- Henry Purcell - Since from my dear., from Diocletian
- Raphael Courteville - Lucinda is young and she's witty
- Simon Pack - That your beauty may be lasting
- Solomon Eccles II - Stubborn church-division, folly and ambition, from The Richmond Heiress
- Henry Purcell - Sound a parly yee fair and surrender, from King Arthur
- John Eccles - What state of life can be so blest, from Love Triumphant
- Henry Purcell - How happy's the husband. from Love Triumphant
- Henry Purcell - Leave, leave these useless arts, from Epsom House
- John Banister - 2 tunes for 2 treble instruments
- Boree
- Minuet
- James Paisible - Tunes for 2 treble instruments
- untitled
- Paspe
- untitled air
- Hornpipe
- Round O
- Slow Air
- Robert King - Tunes for 2 treble instruments
- Round O
- Minuet
- Gavet
- Unattributed - 2 tunes for 2 treble instruments
- Trumpet
- untitled
- Book 3
- Henry Purcell - Good neighbour why, from The Canterbury Guests, or the Bargain Broken
- Henry Purcell - The Knotting Song. Hear's not my Phillis
- Henry Purcell - I sighed, from The Fatal Marriage
- John Eccles - Appear all, from The Rape of Europa by Jupiter
- John Eccles - Still, still I'm grieving, from The Rape of Europa by Jupiter
- John Eccles - Give then, royal maid, from The Rape of Europa by Jupiter
- Unattributed (John Eccles?) - At London che've bin
- John Eccles - Tormenting passion leave my breast, from The Lancashire Witches
- John Eccles - Thus, thus you may be as happy as we, from The Lancashire Witches
- Raphael Courteville - From envy and ambition free
- Henry Purcell - See, see where repenting, from The Married Beau
- John Eccles - Why, oh why, from The Ambitious Slave
- Raphael Courteville - Under how hard a fate
- Raphael Courteville - Phillis we're not griev'd
- Henry Purcell - Lads and lasses, blith and gay, from Don Quixote, Part 2
- John Eccles - Then beauteous nymph look from above, from The Lancashire Witches
- arranged by Thomas D'Urfey - A Scotch Song. Waa is me, what mun I do
- Unattributed - See, see, oh! see Corinna's tears
- James Hart - In this happy smiling shade
- Unattributed - 10 untitled tunes for 2 treble instruments, including:
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- untitled air
- untitled air
- untitled air
- James Hart - Corinna, we allow you fair and youthful
- Book 4
- arranged by Thomas D'Urfey - (Mr Lane's Maggot). Strike up, drowsie gut-scrapers
- Robert King - Cease, cease fond Amintas
- Gottfried Finger - While I with wounding grief did look, from Don Quixote
- Henry Purcell - Lucinda is bewitching fair, from Abdelazar
- Simon Pack - Ask me not to sing
- Unattributed - How happy are we nymphs and swains
- Gottfried Finger - Celia whose charms the ev'ry move
- Unattributed - Had Melanissa gently swayed
- Unattributed - A New Scotch Song. Sawney, let us gang away
- Robert King - Strephon why would you deceive me
- Robert King - Epithalamium. The lazy sun withdraws at last
- Robert King - Whilst on Melanissa gazing
- Unattributed - Let the women be gone
- Unattributed - None would roughly keep the field
- Gottfried Finger - Our hearts are touch't with sacred fires
- Raphael Courteville - No more, no more I'll seek relief
- William Turner - Ah! cruel youth, why hast thou took
- Unattributed - Hopeless I languish out my days
- John Eccles - A nymph and swain, from Love for Love
- John Eccles - The Sailors Song. A soldier and a sailor, a tinker and a tailor, from Love for Love
- Henry Purcell - Two daughters of this aged stream are we
- Mr Robart or Mr Picket - The consort of the sprinkling lute, Mr. Picket's Song, sung at St. Cecilia's Feast, by Mr. Robart
- Unattributed - Insulting beauty, you misspend your frowns
- Book 5
- Gottfried Finger - I promis'd Sylvia to be true
- Daniel Purcell - 'Tis vain, 'tis vain to fly
- Henry Purcell - To arms, to arms, from Bonduca
- Henry Purcell - Britons, strike home, from Bonduca
- John Eccles - Full of the God, from The Lovers Struck
- Johann Wolfgang Franck - Go home, go home, unhappy wretch, from The Lover's Last Shift
- Gottfried Finger - I tell thee, Charmion, could I time retrieve, from Love for Love
- Robert King - When Cynthia did by various ways
- Mr R. W. - Well, Charista, then, said I
- Gottfried Finger - My suit will be over, my fire will decline
- Gottfried Finger - In a dark and lonely den
- Gottfried Finger - Unhappy 'tis that I was born
- William Williams - Belinda, change, change your fickle mind
- William Williams - Unjustly Phillis you accuse your slave, from The Ridiculous Lovers
- William Williams - How peaceful the days are, how pleasant the nights
- John Eccles - Let us revel and roar, from The Lover's Luck
- Robert King - Why Phillis must your anger try
- Henry Purcell - Lovely, lovely Albina, The last Song that Mr. Henry Purcell Sett before he Dy'd.
- John Banister - Tunes for 2 treble instruments
- Simphony. Slow.
- Trumpet Minuet. Round O.
- Minuet
- Minuet
- A March
- untitled
- Saraband
- Minuet
- James Paisible - Tunes for 2 treble instruments
- Minuet
- untitled
- untitled
- Minuet
- Daniel Purcell - What ungrateful devil move you!
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