fbpx
Wikipedia

John Bull (composer)

John Bull (1562/63 – 12/13 March 1628) was an English composer, organist, virginalist and organ builder.[1] He was a renowned keyboard performer of the virginalist school and most of his compositions were written for this medium.

John Bull in c. 1589, portrait kept at the Bate Collection of Musical Instruments

Life and career edit

Bull's place of birth is uncertain. In an article published in 1952, Thurston Dart presumed that Bull's family originated in Somerset, where it is possible the composer was born. It was the 17th-century antiquarian Anthony Wood who first proposed that he was related to the Bull family of Peglich, Somerset, but in 1959 Dart wrote that Bull was probably the son of a London goldsmith….[2] Then, in the second edition of his Calendar of the Life of John Bull, Dart proposed Hereford as a third possibility.[3] More recent research by Susi Jeans suggests that Bull was born in the Radnorshire parish of Old Radnor within the Diocese of Hereford, although no birth records have yet been discovered. Bull's appointment as organist of Hereford Cathedral in 1582 lends credence to this diocese being his place of birth: it was customary at this time for organists to return to their home cathedrals after training in London (cf: Thomas Morley).

 
Hereford Cathedral, 17th-century engraving

In 1573 he joined the choir at Hereford Cathedral, and the next year joined the Children of the Chapel Royal in London, where he studied with John Blitheman and William Hunnis; in addition to singing he learned to play the organ at this time. After being appointed to the Merchant Taylor's Company in 1577–78, Bull received his first appointment as organist of Hereford Cathedral in 1582, and then became Master of the Children there.

In 1586 he received his degree from Oxford, and he became a Gentleman of the Chapel Royal that same year. In 1591, following the death of John Blitheman, he became organist at the Chapel Royal; in 1592 he received his doctorate from Oxford, and in 1596 he became the first professor of music at Gresham College on the recommendation of Queen Elizabeth, who admired him. There is some evidence that she sent Bull on espionage missions: his eighteen-month trip to the continent in 1601–02, ostensibly for health reasons, has never been satisfactorily explained, and his whereabouts there, apart from a visit to Brussels, then in the Spanish Netherlands, remain a mystery.[4][5] On the death of Elizabeth, he entered into the service of King James, establishing a reputation as a skilled composer, keyboard performer and improviser.

However, in addition to his virtuosity as a keyboard performer and composer, Bull was also skilled at getting into trouble. In 1597 his appointment to Gresham College required him to obey the committee's ordinances, lodge at Gresham House, and give an inaugural lecture during the second week of June in the presence of the lord mayor, the aldermen, the Bishop of London and the master and warden of the Mercers Company. Fearful of losing his readership because his assigned rooms were still occupied by Thomas Gresham's stepson, William Reade, he forced an entry to the rooms by engaging a mason to help him break down a wall, which led to an action against Bull in Star Chamber. The outcome of this case is not known. Ten years later, he was forced to leave his post at Gresham College on 20 December 1607, after he fathered a child pre-maritally with an Elizabeth Walter, thus losing his best source of income as well as his quarters.[6] Even though he filed a petition for a marriage licence two days after he lost his job, he never returned to the college. He married Elizabeth Walter in 1607, by whom he had a daughter.[citation needed]

Just after publishing seven keyboard pieces in Parthenia, Bull left England for good, secretly and with great haste in October 1613. His salary at the Chapel Royal was paid in lieu to Edmund Hooper.[7] Bull was fleeing the wrath of George Abbot, Archbishop of Canterbury, and King James himself; the charge this time was adultery. William Trumbull, the English envoy in the Low Countries, after first attempting to cover for him – but later fearing for his own position if he continued to do so – wrote to the King in early 1614:

Bull did not leave your Majesties service for any wrong done unto him, or for matter of religion, under which fained pretext he now sought to wrong the reputation of your Majesties justice, but did in that dishonest matter steal out of England through the guilt of a corrupt conscience, to escape the punishment, which notoriously he had deserved, and was designed to have been inflicted on him by the hand of justice, for his incontinence, fornication, adultery, and other grievious crimes.[8]

The Archbishop of Canterbury had said of him the previous year: "the man hath more music than honesty and is as famous for marring of virginity as he is for fingering of organs and virginals." The archbishop described the case to Trumbull; Bull slept in a bed with his wife and two maidservants slept in a truckle bed underneath. One summer morning Bull made one of the maids take his place by his wife, while he slept with the other maid in the truckle bed. Bull had also assaulted a church minister in front of the congregation.[9]

 
Antwerp Cathedral, painted c. 1820 by Domenico Quaglio the Younger. Bull worked as organist of the cathedral from 1615 until his death.

Bull remained in Flanders, where it seems he stayed out of trouble. He was briefly employed at the Brussels court, but was released after Trumbull communicated King James's displeasure; he continued to receive money from the court until 1618.[10] In 1615 Antwerp Cathedral appointed him as assistant organist, and as principal organist in 1617. Bull wrote a series of letters while in Flanders, including one to the mayor of Antwerp, claiming that the reason he left England was to escape religious persecution. Although there is no evidence that he was a Catholic, he wrote, somewhat ambiguously

how, in the month of October in the year 1613 he was forced to take flight thence hither, since information had been laid against him that he was of the Catholic faith, and that he could not acknowledge His Majesty as head of the Church. Which is a capital offence there.[citation needed]

He seems to have been believed, for he was never extradited back to England in spite of Trumbull's complaining to the Archduke. While in Antwerp he most probably met Jan Pieterszoon Sweelinck, the most influential keyboard composer of the age.

In the 1620s he continued his career as an organist, organ builder and consultant. He died in Antwerp and was buried on 15 March 1628 in the cemetery next to the cathedral.

Works edit

Bull was one of the most famous composers of keyboard music of the early 17th century, exceeded only by Jan Pieterszoon Sweelinck in the Netherlands, Girolamo Frescobaldi in Italy, and, some would say, by his countryman and elder, the celebrated William Byrd. He left many compositions for keyboard, some of which were collected in the Fitzwilliam Virginal Book.

His first (and only) publication, in 1612 or 1613, was a contribution of seven pieces forming part of a collection of virginal music entitled Parthenia, or the Maydenhead of the First Musicke That Ever Was Printed for the Virginalls, dedicated to the 15-year-old Princess Elizabeth, who was his student, on the occasion of her betrothal to Frederick V, Elector Palatine of the Rhine. The other contributors to Parthenia were Bull's contemporaries William Byrd and Orlando Gibbons, among the most famous composers of the age. Bull also wrote an anthem, God the father, God the son, for the wedding in 1613 of the princess and the Elector Palatine.

In addition to his keyboard compositions, he wrote verse anthems, canons and other works.

His 5-part anthem Almighty God, which by the Leading of a Star, known colloquially as the Star Anthem, was the most popular Jacobean verse anthem, occurring in more contemporary sources than any other.

Much of his music was lost when he fled England; some was destroyed, and some was stolen by other composers, though occasionally such misattributions can be corrected today based on stylistic grounds. One of the most unusual collections of music from the period is his book of 120 canons, an astonishing display of contrapuntal skill worthy of Ockeghem or J.S. Bach.[citation needed] Of the 120 canons, 116 are based on the Miserere. Techniques employed to transform the simple theme include diminution, augmentation, retrograde and mixed time signatures. Some of his music in the Fitzwilliam Virginal Book is of a lighter character and uses whimsical titles: "A Battle and No Battle," "Bonny Peg of Ramsey," "The King's Hunt," and "Bull's Good-Night."

He is sometimes credited with the composition of "God Save the King", the national and/or royal anthem of a number of Commonwealth realms, their territories, and the Crown Dependencies.[11]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Neighbour & Jeans 2001.
  2. ^ Thurston Dart: Search for the Real John Bull. New York Times, 1 November 1959, sec. 2, p.1
  3. ^ John Bull: Keyboard Music. Calendar of the Life of John Bull, compiled by Thurston Dart, vol I, p. xxi.
  4. ^ Leigh Henry, pp.153–170.
  5. ^ Walker Cunningham, p.3
  6. ^ Neighbour & Jeans 2001, §2.
  7. ^ 'Hooper, Edmund' in The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
  8. ^ Thurston Dart, "An Unknown Letter from Dr. John Bull," Acta Musicologica 32 (1960), p.175
  9. ^ HMC Downshire, vol. 4 (London, 1940), pp. 270–1.
  10. ^ The Harvard Biographical Dictionary of Music, edited by Don Michael Randel (Belknap Press, 1996), p. 117.
  11. ^ Bradley, Ian. Daily Telegraph Book of Hymns. Bloomsbury Publishing, 2006. p. 43. ISBN 1441139699.

Sources edit

  • Susi Jeans, "John Bull". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, ed. Stanley Sadie. 20 vols. London: Macmillan Publishers Ltd., 1980. ISBN 1-56159-174-2
  • The Concise Edition of Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians, 8th ed. Revised by Nicolas Slonimsky. New York: Schirmer Books, 1993. ISBN 0-02-872416-X
  • Manfred Bukofzer, Music in the Baroque Era. New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1947. ISBN 0-393-09745-5
  • Leigh Henry, Dr John Bull: 1562–1628. [London]: Herbert Joseph Ltd, in association with the Globe-Mermaid Association, 1937. Reprinted, Da Capo Press Music Reprint Series. New York: Da Capo Press, 1968.
  • Walker Cunningham, The Keyboard Music of John Bull. Studies in Musicology 71. Ann Arbor: UMI Research Press, 1984. ISBN 0-8357-1466-7
  • John Bull: Keyboard Music. Edited by John Steele & Francis Cameron, with additional material by Thurston Dart. Stainer & Bell, London 1967. 2 vols.
  • Neighbour, Oliver; Jeans, Susi (2001). "Bull [Boul, Bul, Bol], John". Grove Music Online. Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.04294. ISBN 978-1-56159-263-0. (subscription or UK public library membership required)
  • Pieter Dirksen, "Towards a canon of the keyboard music of John Bull", in: Aspects of Early English Keyboard Music to c.1630, ed. David J. Smith (Ashgate Historical Keyboard Series, Oxon/New York: Routledge, 2019), S. 184–206.

Further reading edit

External links edit

john, bull, composer, john, bull, 1562, march, 1628, english, composer, organist, virginalist, organ, builder, renowned, keyboard, performer, virginalist, school, most, compositions, were, written, this, medium, john, bull, 1589, portrait, kept, bate, collecti. John Bull 1562 63 12 13 March 1628 was an English composer organist virginalist and organ builder 1 He was a renowned keyboard performer of the virginalist school and most of his compositions were written for this medium John Bull in c 1589 portrait kept at the Bate Collection of Musical Instruments Contents 1 Life and career 2 Works 3 See also 4 Notes 5 Sources 6 Further reading 7 External linksLife and career editBull s place of birth is uncertain In an article published in 1952 Thurston Dart presumed that Bull s family originated in Somerset where it is possible the composer was born It was the 17th century antiquarian Anthony Wood who first proposed that he was related to the Bull family of Peglich Somerset but in 1959 Dart wrote that Bull was probably the son of a London goldsmith 2 Then in the second edition of his Calendar of the Life of John Bull Dart proposed Hereford as a third possibility 3 More recent research by Susi Jeans suggests that Bull was born in the Radnorshire parish of Old Radnor within the Diocese of Hereford although no birth records have yet been discovered Bull s appointment as organist of Hereford Cathedral in 1582 lends credence to this diocese being his place of birth it was customary at this time for organists to return to their home cathedrals after training in London cf Thomas Morley nbsp Hereford Cathedral 17th century engraving In 1573 he joined the choir at Hereford Cathedral and the next year joined the Children of the Chapel Royal in London where he studied with John Blitheman and William Hunnis in addition to singing he learned to play the organ at this time After being appointed to the Merchant Taylor s Company in 1577 78 Bull received his first appointment as organist of Hereford Cathedral in 1582 and then became Master of the Children there In 1586 he received his degree from Oxford and he became a Gentleman of the Chapel Royal that same year In 1591 following the death of John Blitheman he became organist at the Chapel Royal in 1592 he received his doctorate from Oxford and in 1596 he became the first professor of music at Gresham College on the recommendation of Queen Elizabeth who admired him There is some evidence that she sent Bull on espionage missions his eighteen month trip to the continent in 1601 02 ostensibly for health reasons has never been satisfactorily explained and his whereabouts there apart from a visit to Brussels then in the Spanish Netherlands remain a mystery 4 5 On the death of Elizabeth he entered into the service of King James establishing a reputation as a skilled composer keyboard performer and improviser However in addition to his virtuosity as a keyboard performer and composer Bull was also skilled at getting into trouble In 1597 his appointment to Gresham College required him to obey the committee s ordinances lodge at Gresham House and give an inaugural lecture during the second week of June in the presence of the lord mayor the aldermen the Bishop of London and the master and warden of the Mercers Company Fearful of losing his readership because his assigned rooms were still occupied by Thomas Gresham s stepson William Reade he forced an entry to the rooms by engaging a mason to help him break down a wall which led to an action against Bull in Star Chamber The outcome of this case is not known Ten years later he was forced to leave his post at Gresham College on 20 December 1607 after he fathered a child pre maritally with an Elizabeth Walter thus losing his best source of income as well as his quarters 6 Even though he filed a petition for a marriage licence two days after he lost his job he never returned to the college He married Elizabeth Walter in 1607 by whom he had a daughter citation needed Just after publishing seven keyboard pieces in Parthenia Bull left England for good secretly and with great haste in October 1613 His salary at the Chapel Royal was paid in lieu to Edmund Hooper 7 Bull was fleeing the wrath of George Abbot Archbishop of Canterbury and King James himself the charge this time was adultery William Trumbull the English envoy in the Low Countries after first attempting to cover for him but later fearing for his own position if he continued to do so wrote to the King in early 1614 Bull did not leave your Majesties service for any wrong done unto him or for matter of religion under which fained pretext he now sought to wrong the reputation of your Majesties justice but did in that dishonest matter steal out of England through the guilt of a corrupt conscience to escape the punishment which notoriously he had deserved and was designed to have been inflicted on him by the hand of justice for his incontinence fornication adultery and other grievious crimes 8 The Archbishop of Canterbury had said of him the previous year the man hath more music than honesty and is as famous for marring of virginity as he is for fingering of organs and virginals The archbishop described the case to Trumbull Bull slept in a bed with his wife and two maidservants slept in a truckle bed underneath One summer morning Bull made one of the maids take his place by his wife while he slept with the other maid in the truckle bed Bull had also assaulted a church minister in front of the congregation 9 nbsp Antwerp Cathedral painted c 1820 by Domenico Quaglio the Younger Bull worked as organist of the cathedral from 1615 until his death Bull remained in Flanders where it seems he stayed out of trouble He was briefly employed at the Brussels court but was released after Trumbull communicated King James s displeasure he continued to receive money from the court until 1618 10 In 1615 Antwerp Cathedral appointed him as assistant organist and as principal organist in 1617 Bull wrote a series of letters while in Flanders including one to the mayor of Antwerp claiming that the reason he left England was to escape religious persecution Although there is no evidence that he was a Catholic he wrote somewhat ambiguously how in the month of October in the year 1613 he was forced to take flight thence hither since information had been laid against him that he was of the Catholic faith and that he could not acknowledge His Majesty as head of the Church Which is a capital offence there citation needed He seems to have been believed for he was never extradited back to England in spite of Trumbull s complaining to the Archduke While in Antwerp he most probably met Jan Pieterszoon Sweelinck the most influential keyboard composer of the age In the 1620s he continued his career as an organist organ builder and consultant He died in Antwerp and was buried on 15 March 1628 in the cemetery next to the cathedral Works editBull was one of the most famous composers of keyboard music of the early 17th century exceeded only by Jan Pieterszoon Sweelinck in the Netherlands Girolamo Frescobaldi in Italy and some would say by his countryman and elder the celebrated William Byrd He left many compositions for keyboard some of which were collected in the Fitzwilliam Virginal Book His first and only publication in 1612 or 1613 was a contribution of seven pieces forming part of a collection of virginal music entitled Parthenia or the Maydenhead of the First Musicke That Ever Was Printed for the Virginalls dedicated to the 15 year old Princess Elizabeth who was his student on the occasion of her betrothal to Frederick V Elector Palatine of the Rhine The other contributors to Parthenia were Bull s contemporaries William Byrd and Orlando Gibbons among the most famous composers of the age Bull also wrote an anthem God the father God the son for the wedding in 1613 of the princess and the Elector Palatine In addition to his keyboard compositions he wrote verse anthems canons and other works His 5 part anthem Almighty God which by the Leading of a Star known colloquially as the Star Anthem was the most popular Jacobean verse anthem occurring in more contemporary sources than any other Much of his music was lost when he fled England some was destroyed and some was stolen by other composers though occasionally such misattributions can be corrected today based on stylistic grounds One of the most unusual collections of music from the period is his book of 120 canons an astonishing display of contrapuntal skill worthy of Ockeghem or J S Bach citation needed Of the 120 canons 116 are based on the Miserere Techniques employed to transform the simple theme include diminution augmentation retrograde and mixed time signatures Some of his music in the Fitzwilliam Virginal Book is of a lighter character and uses whimsical titles A Battle and No Battle Bonny Peg of Ramsey The King s Hunt and Bull s Good Night He is sometimes credited with the composition of God Save the King the national and or royal anthem of a number of Commonwealth realms their territories and the Crown Dependencies 11 See also editList of Gresham Professors of MusicNotes edit Neighbour amp Jeans 2001 Thurston Dart Search for the Real John Bull New York Times 1 November 1959 sec 2 p 1 John Bull Keyboard Music Calendar of the Life of John Bull compiled by Thurston Dart vol I p xxi Leigh Henry pp 153 170 Walker Cunningham p 3 Neighbour amp Jeans 2001 2 Hooper Edmund in The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Thurston Dart An Unknown Letter from Dr John Bull Acta Musicologica 32 1960 p 175 HMC Downshire vol 4 London 1940 pp 270 1 The Harvard Biographical Dictionary of Music edited by Don Michael Randel Belknap Press 1996 p 117 Bradley Ian Daily Telegraph Book of Hymns Bloomsbury Publishing 2006 p 43 ISBN 1441139699 Sources edit nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Bull John Susi Jeans John Bull The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians ed Stanley Sadie 20 vols London Macmillan Publishers Ltd 1980 ISBN 1 56159 174 2 The Concise Edition of Baker s Biographical Dictionary of Musicians 8th ed Revised by Nicolas Slonimsky New York Schirmer Books 1993 ISBN 0 02 872416 X Manfred Bukofzer Music in the Baroque Era New York W W Norton amp Co 1947 ISBN 0 393 09745 5 Leigh Henry Dr John Bull 1562 1628 London Herbert Joseph Ltd in association with the Globe Mermaid Association 1937 Reprinted Da Capo Press Music Reprint Series New York Da Capo Press 1968 Walker Cunningham The Keyboard Music of John Bull Studies in Musicology 71 Ann Arbor UMI Research Press 1984 ISBN 0 8357 1466 7 John Bull Keyboard Music Edited by John Steele amp Francis Cameron with additional material by Thurston Dart Stainer amp Bell London 1967 2 vols Neighbour Oliver Jeans Susi 2001 Bull Boul Bul Bol John Grove Music Online Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 gmo 9781561592630 article 04294 ISBN 978 1 56159 263 0 subscription or UK public library membership required Pieter Dirksen Towards a canon of the keyboard music of John Bull in Aspects of Early English Keyboard Music to c 1630 ed David J Smith Ashgate Historical Keyboard Series Oxon New York Routledge 2019 S 184 206 Further reading editReese Gustave 1959 Music in the Renaissance revised ed New York W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 09530 2 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to John Bull composer Free scores by John Bull at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP Free scores by John Bull composer in the Choral Public Domain Library ChoralWiki Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Bull composer amp oldid 1218502888, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.