John Taverner: Difference between revisions

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<!-- '''Aliases:''' -->
==Life==
==Life==
'''Born:''' 1490
'''Born:''' c. 1490?


'''Died:''' 25 October 1545
'''Died:''' 25 October 1545


'''Biography'''
'''Biography'''
 
While there was a John Taverner in London in 1514, there is no reason to assume this was the composer who surfaced at Tattershall in 1524 and founded the choir of Cardinal College Oxford (the predecessor of Christ Church) in 1526. In 1528 he was suspected but cleared of Lutheranism; in 1529 his patron Woolsey was disgraced and in 1530 he left Oxford, ultimately settling in Boston, Lincolnshire where he became an alderman. The martyrologist/propagandist John Foxe wrote that Taverner did "repent him very much that he had made songs to popish ditties in the time of his blindness" but Roger Bowers in New Grove discerns stylistic features in the masses that suggest a composing career that continued well past the 1520's. The artist who gives up music for politics makes an intriguing premise for Max Davies' opera ''Taverner'' (1972), however.
{{WikipediaLink}}


==List of choral works==
==List of choral works==
{{Legend}}
Taverner's work includes besides the following many incomplete pieces and 9 Mass fragments.
 
*{{NoCo|Alleluyas}} 1 & 2
*{{NoCo|Alleluyas}} &nbsp; {{editions|2}}
*{{NoCo|Audivi: Media nocte}}
*{{NoCo|Audivi: Media nocte|Audivi vocem de coelo}} &nbsp; {{editions|2}}
*{{NoCo|Ave Dei Patris Filia}}
*{{NoCo|Ave Dei Patris Filia}} &nbsp; ( [http://www.kingcharlessingers.org.uk/editions.html {{net}}] )
*''Ave Maria'' (5vv, missing Tr, T)
*{{NoCo|Christe Jesu, pastor bone}} &nbsp; {{LLink|Christe_Jesu,_pastor_bone.pdf|Christe_Jesu,_pastor_bone.mid|Christe_Jesu,_pastor_bone.sib|Sibelius 4}}
*{{NoCo|Christe Jesu, pastor bone}}
*{{NoCo|Dum transisset Sabbatum I}} &nbsp; {{editions|3}}
*{{NoCo|Dum transisset Sabbatum I}}
* ''Dum transisset Sabbatum II''
* ''Dum transisset Sabbatum II''
* ''Gaude plurimum''
* {{NoCo|Gaude Plurimum}}
*{{NoCo|In pace}} &nbsp; {{editions|2}}
*{{NoCo|Hodie nobis caelorum}}
*{{NoCo|In trouble and adversity}} &nbsp; ( [{{filepath:In_Trouble.pdf}} {{pdf}}] [{{filepath:In_Trouble.MID}} {{mid}}] )
*{{NoCo|In pace}}
 
*{{NoCo|Kyrie Le Roy}}
*{{NoCo|Kyrie Le Roy}} &nbsp; {{editions|2}}
*3 Magnificats, of which ''Magnificat sexti toni'' (4vv) survives complete
* ''Mater Christi''
*{{NoCo|Mater Christi}}
* ''Missa Corona Spinea''
*{{NoCo|Missa Gloria tibi Trinitas}}
*{{NoCo|Missa Gloria tibi Trinitas}}
**''Gloria'' &nbsp; ( [{{filepath:Taverner-Missa_Gloria_tibi_Trinitas-1-Gloria.mus}} {{pdf}}] [{{filepath:Taverner-Missa_Gloria_tibi_Trinitas-1-Gloria.mid}} {{mid}}] [{{filepath:Taverner-Missa_Gloria_tibi_Trinitas-1-Gloria.mus}} Finale 2005] )
**{{NoCo|In trouble and adversity}} (Tudor contrafactum of Taverner's instrumental ''In nomine'')
**''Sanctus'' &nbsp; ( [{{filepath:Taverner_M.Gloria_tibi_-_Sanctus.pdf}} {{pdf}}] [{{filepath:Taverner_M.Gloria_tibi_-_Sanctus.mid}} {{mid}}] [{{filepath:Taverner_M.Gloria_tibi_-_Sanctus.mus}} Finale 2000] )
*Missa Mater Christi (5vv, missing T)
*{{NoCo|The Mean Mass}} &nbsp; {{editions|0}}
*{{NoCo|The Mean Mass}}
* ''Quemadmodum''
*Missa O Michael 6vv
*{{NoCo|Mass 'Small Devotion'}} (5vv, missing T)
*Plainsong mass 4vv
*{{NoCo|Sub tuum praesidium}}
*{{NoCo|O splendor gloriae}}
*{{NoCo|O splendor gloriae}}
*{{NoCo|O Willelme, pastor bone}}
*{{NoCo|Quemadmodum}}
*{{NoCo|The Western Wind Mass}}
*{{NoCo|The Western Wind Mass}}
**''Gloria'' &nbsp; {{LLinkW|tav-glor.pdf|tav-glor.mid|tav-glor.zip|Capella}}
*{{NoCo|Te Deum}} ("Te aeternum Patrem", 5vv missing T)
**''Credo'' &nbsp; {{LLinkW|tav-cred.pdf|tav-cred.mid|tav-cred.zip|Capella}}
{{CheckMissing}}
**''Agnus Dei'' &nbsp; {{LLinkW|tav-agnu.pdf|tav-agnu.mid|tav-agnu.zip|Capella}}


{{Whatlinkshere}}
{{Whatlinkshere}}
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==External links==
==External links==
''add web links here''
*{{IMSLP}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:{{NameSorter}}}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:{{NameSorter}}}}

Revision as of 02:22, 8 April 2021

Life

Born: c. 1490?

Died: 25 October 1545

Biography While there was a John Taverner in London in 1514, there is no reason to assume this was the composer who surfaced at Tattershall in 1524 and founded the choir of Cardinal College Oxford (the predecessor of Christ Church) in 1526. In 1528 he was suspected but cleared of Lutheranism; in 1529 his patron Woolsey was disgraced and in 1530 he left Oxford, ultimately settling in Boston, Lincolnshire where he became an alderman. The martyrologist/propagandist John Foxe wrote that Taverner did "repent him very much that he had made songs to popish ditties in the time of his blindness" but Roger Bowers in New Grove discerns stylistic features in the masses that suggest a composing career that continued well past the 1520's. The artist who gives up music for politics makes an intriguing premise for Max Davies' opera Taverner (1972), however.

List of choral works

Taverner's work includes besides the following many incomplete pieces and 9 Mass fragments.

Other works not listed above (See Template:CheckMissing for possible reasons and solutions)


Click here to search for this composer on CPDL

Publications

External links