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John Sheppard (composer)

John Sheppard (also Shepherd, c. 1515 – December 1558) was an English composer of the Renaissance.

Biography edit

Sheppard was probably born around 1515, judging from his statement in 1554 that he had been composing music for twenty years.[1] Nothing certain is known about his early life. The first undoubted sighting of him occurs when he was probably in his later twenties, as informator choristarum at Magdalen College, Oxford. He served in this capacity during 1541-2 and again from 1544-8.[2]

Sheppard left Magdalen College in March 1548 and next appears in a list of the Gentleman of the Chapel Royal who sang at the funeral of King Edward VI in August 1553; he may have joined the chapel directly after his departure from Magdalen, but, because of a gap in Chapel Royal records from 1547, this is not certain.[3] He presumably remained active at the chapel up to the year of his death.

In 1554 he supplicated, apparently unsuccessfully, for the degree of Doctor of Music at Oxford University, stating that he had studied music for twenty years and had "composed many songs".[4][5] In March 1556 he witnessed the will of a fellow Gentleman of the chapel, Luke Caustell, and on New Year's Day 1557 he presented three rolls of songs to Mary Tudor.[6] In July 1558 he and his Chapel Royal colleague Richard Edwards were granted the reversion of a lease of a manor in Kent.[7]

Sheppard died in December 1558 during an influenza epidemic. He made his will on 1 December and was buried at St Margaret's, Westminster on 21 December.[8] Despite this, he was awarded liveries for both the funeral of Queen Mary on 13 December and for the coronation of Elizabeth I on 15 January 1559.[9]

Sources edit

Sheppard's compositions for the Latin liturgy exist exclusively in post-Reformation anthologies. Most are contained in two sets of partbooks: the principal source of his Latin music in five or more parts is the Baldwin partbooks at Christ Church, Oxford (GB-Och Mus. 979-83), copied after 1575,[10] while his four-part pieces are in the so-called Gyffard Partbooks (GB-Lbl Add. 17802-5), a set of four manuscript partbooks, probably copied for Dr Roger Gyffard during the 1570s.[11] Much of the Gyffard music may have been composed during Sheppard's Magdalen years (Gyffard had formerly been a fellow of Merton College, Oxford). Relatively few of the pieces in these two sources appear elsewhere.

Other sources supply few additional pieces beyond extracts from longer compositions. His mass Cantate appears exclusively in the Forrest-Heyther partbooks; a 'Kyrie' for Easter Day (see below) is found in the Hammond Partbooks (GB-Lbl Add. MSS 30480–4) and elsewhere; and a setting for two soloists of the troped lesson 'Laudes Deo' for the first mass of Christmas Day is in a manuscript at Oxford (GB-Och Mus. 45). The six-part Gaude virgo Christiphera, the only large-scale votive antiphon by Sheppard to survive in anything more than a fragmentary state, appears in a seventeenth-century set of partbooks that now lacks its sixth, superius book (GB-Ob Tenbury 807-11); the missing treble part can be partially completed with the help of other sources, but is still lacking in the fully scored, six-voice sections.[12]

The sources for Sheppard's English-texted music are more diverse. Two sources compiled or planned during his lifetime contain a few of his anthems: the Wanley Partbooks (GB-Ob MSS Mus. Sch. e. 420-22) and John Day's Certaine Notes. Although Day's collection was not finally published until 1565, there are reasons to believe that it was planned during the reign of Edward VI.[13] The sources for Sheppard's services are all of much later date and often incomplete.

Works edit

Masses edit

Of Sheppard's five surviving Mass ordinary cycles, the six-part Cantate is a full-length, sumptuous festal setting in the tradition of John Taverner, constructed in units of six-part polyphony alternating with a mosaic of semi-choir sections. The principal unifying device, apart from the head-motive passages at the beginning of each movement, is the eight-note figure F-E-F-G-A-Bb-G-F, which occurs at various points in the tenor.

Of the four-part Mass cycles, Western Wynde is based on a pre-existing popular melody, also forming the basis of Mass cycles by Taverner and Christopher Tye.[3] In Sheppard's setting the melody migrates between the treble and the tenor. Two other cycles, Be not afraid and The Frences Mass are both elaborately contrapuntal and freely constructed, with the former scored exclusively for men's voices.

Playnsong Masse for a Mene (also for four voices) is a much simpler work. Written in a simplified notation known as 'strene,' which resembles the symbols of plainsong, it utilises a technique occasionally employed to allow those able to read plainsong, but not mensural notation, to sing simple polyphony. This 'plainsong' style, which was rhythmically uncomplicated and admitted no dissonance more complicated than a cadential suspension (although there is a notable exception in Sheppard's Agnus Dei), is also to be found in Taverner's Plainsong Mass – although this now survives only in conventional, mensural notation. Sheppard's mass includes a Kyrie (unlike most Sarum Mass cycles) and is an alternatim setting with alternating sections of chant and polyphony.

Other Latin music edit

On her accession in 1553, Mary Tudor determined to restore England to the Catholic faith after the Protestant years of Edward VI. This entailed restoring the Latin-language services of the Sarum Rite. A new, up-to-date repertoire of music was required for her chapel, and Sheppard was instrumental in supplying it with suitable compositions.[14]

Responsories edit

There are 20 responsories, elaborate liturgical units sung in their most expansive form at Vespers on the more important feasts and at Matins. In this form the complete responsory is sung and then followed by, first, a verse and, secondly, a doxology, each of which is followed by (often progressively) shortened repeats of the responsory.[9] Sheppard often set the responsory to five or six-part polyphony with the chant sung as a cantus firmus in the tenor (less commonly in the treble or mean), leaving the sections that were sung by soloists (the incipit, verse and doxology) to be chanted.

A good example of Sheppard's technique is his six-part setting of Verbum caro, the ninth responsory at Matins on Christmas Day. One of the most grandiose of Sheppard's responsories is Gaude, gaude, gaude Maria; a setting of the responsory and interpolated 'prosa' for Second Vespers for the Feast of the Purification.[15] In a few settings, for All Saints' Day, Christmas and Lent, he employs the reverse procedure, providing polyphony for the soloists' sections of the chant, but leaving the choral section of the responsory to be sung to plainsong (e.g. In pace in idipsum).

Other liturgical works edit

Like Tallis, Sheppard also composed 'alternatim' hymns, setting the even-numbered verses in polyphony and leaving the odd-numbered verses to be chanted or, more probably, replaced by (perhaps improvised) organ settings of the chant. Whilst the cantus firmus in Sheppard's responds is normally in the tenor, in his hymns it is usually placed in the treble.

Sheppard also composed a number of additional items for particularly solemn feasts of the Church calendar, including settings of the Kyrie and Gradual Haec dies for Second Vespers (not, in this case, the mass) on Easter Day. Of his 'alternatim' settings of the processional psalms for the procession to the font after Second Vespers on Easter Day, he completed Laudate pueri Dominum, but only part of In exitu Israel, leaving its completion to William Mundy and the young William Byrd.

Media vita edit

Arguably supreme amongst all of Sheppard's compositions is his cantus firmus setting of the Lenten Nunc dimittis antiphon Media vita in morte sumus. Here his innovative use of the cantus firmus in breves allows for an expansive canvas and a leisurely harmonic rhythm that effectively complement his solemn treatment of the text.[16]

The date and circumstances of the work's creation remain unclear because the original manuscript is lost. The work might have been written for the funeral of Nicholas Ludford, a fellow composer who died in the 1557 influenza epidemic.[17] The work survives only in the partbooks copied by John Baldwin in the late 1570s. Baldwin's copy now lacks one of the six vocal parts, the tenor, but, since this part bore the plainsong cantus firmus, it can be readily restored from contemporary chant books, except, possibly, in the first two verses where a reconstructed tenor part may or may not be needed (the music sounds complete without it). Recent research has shown that the form of the work as usually performed is incorrect. In particular the chanted Nunc dimittis precedes the antiphon and the scheme of the polyphonic repeats is not as extensive as previously thought.[18] Sheppard's bold counterpoint has led some to question whether the surviving text contains copying errors that make the work sound more modern than it should do.[17]

Regardless, Sheppard's Media vita has remained enduringly popular, with at least nine modern commercial recordings.[17]

English music edit

Sheppard's vernacular music has suffered seriously from the loss of manuscript sources. Since he died only a month after Queen Mary, his settings for the Protestant services must have been composed during the reign of Edward VI, who, after some experimental services in 1548, established the first Book of Common Prayer in 1549. Some of Sheppard's English-texted music, such as his setting of the Lord's Prayer and his cycle of metrical psalms by Thomas Sternhold (in GB-Lbl Add. MS 15166) may have been composed for domestic recreation rather than for church use.

As many as ten services (settings of canticles and other items for the new English Morning Prayer, Evening Prayer and Communion services) have been identified,[19] all surviving in varying degrees of incompleteness. The Second Service is noteworthy for having influenced the design of Byrd's Great Service.[20] Stefan Scot has observed that the Creed of the First Service is virtually identical musically to the Creed of Tallis's untitled four-part Mass in the Gyffard Partbooks.[21] Sheppard's fifteen English anthems, most of which are à 4, comply with the demands of the Protestant reformers for simplicity, clear, audible words and largely syllabic text-underlay.

The part-songs O happy dames[22] and Vain, vain, all our life we spend in vain[23] (both à 4) are Sheppard's only known works to non-sacred texts.

Editions edit

  • Chadd, David, ed. John Sheppard: I: Responsorial Music. London: Stainer & Bell, 1977. Print. Early English Church Music. 17.
  • Sandon, Nicholas, ed. John Sheppard: II: Masses. London: Stainer & Bell, 1976. Print. Early English Church Music. 18.
  • Mateer, David, ed. The Gyffard Partbooks, I. London: Stainer & Bell, 2007. Print. Early English Church Music. 48 / 33, 40, 41.
  • Mateer, David, ed. The Gyffard Partbooks, II. London: Stainer & Bell, 2009. Print. Early English Church Music. 51 / 7, 15.
  • Williamson, Magnus, ed. John Sheppard: III: Hymns, Psalms, Antiphons, and other Latin Polyphony. London: Stainer & Bell, 2012. Print. Early English Church Music. 54.

Recordings edit

References edit

  1. ^ Magnus Williamson (ed.) "John Sheppard: Hymns, Psalms, Antiphons and other Latin Polyphony", Early English Church Music 54 (London: Stainer & Bell Ltd, 2012), p.xi.
  2. ^ Williamson, "John Sheppard", p.xi.
  3. ^ a b Hugh Benham, Latin Church Music in England, c. 1460-1575 (London: Barrie & Jenkins, 1977), p.197.
  4. ^ J. R. Bloxham, A Register of the Members of St. Mary Magdalen College, Oxford. (London: Oxford University Press, 1857), p.187.
  5. ^ Nicholas Sandon (ed.), "John Sheppard: II: Masses," Early English Church Music 18 (London: Stainer & Bell, 1976), p.ix.
  6. ^ London, British Library Add. MS 62525, f.2v
  7. ^ Williamson, "John Sheppard", p.xvi.
  8. ^ David Wulstan, 'Where There's a Will', Musical Times 135 (January 1994), pp.25–27.
  9. ^ a b David Chadd, "Sheppard, John," Grove Music Online, Oxford Music Online, Oxford University Press. Web, 5 Feb. 2016.
  10. ^ "Christ Church Library music catalogue: Mus. 979-83".
  11. ^ David Mateer, "The Gyffard Partbooks: composers, owners, date and provenance," [Royal Musical Association] Research Chronicle, 28 (1995), pp.21–50.
  12. ^ John Milsom, "Sacred songs in the chamber" in John Morehen (ed.), English Choral Practice, 1400-1650 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995), p.175; Williamson, "John Sheppard", p.241.
  13. ^ John Aplin, "The Origins of John Day’s 'Certaine Notes'", Music and Letters lxii (1981), pp.295–299.
  14. ^ Roger Bowers, "To chorus from quartet" in John Morehen (ed.), English Choral Practice, 1400-1650 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995), p.42.
  15. ^ Benham, p.198
  16. ^ Benham, p.201.
  17. ^ a b c Allen, David (30 December 2020). "From a 1550s Pandemic, a Choral Work Still Casts Its Spell". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2 January 2021.
  18. ^ David Skinner, booklet notes for digital EP, David Skinner/Alamire: John Sheppard: Media vita in morte sumushttps://www.resonusclassics.com/freedownload/INV1003_booklet.pdf
  19. ^ [Stefan Scot], liner notes for CD "The Church Music of John Sheppard: The Collected Vernacular Works, Volume II", Priory Records, PRCD 1108 (2015). Scot's authorship of the notes is revealed by Richard Turbet at http://earlymusicreview.com/the-church-music-of-john-sheppard-the-collected-vernacular-works-volume-ii (accessed 27 Dec 2018).
  20. ^ Richard Turbet, "Wings of Faith: Richard Turbet uncovers a close relationship between Services by William Byrd and John Sheppard", 'Musical Times' 138 (December 1997), pp.5-10.
  21. ^ [Stefan Scot], liner notes for CD "The Church Music of John Sheppard: The Collected Vernacular Works, Volume 1", Priory Records, PRCD 1081 (2013).
  22. ^ John Caldwell (ed.), "The Mulliner Book", 'Musica Britannica' 1 (London: Stainer & Bell, 2011), p.163.
  23. ^ John Caldwell (ed.), "Tudor Keyboard Music c.1520-1580", 'Musica Britannica' 66 (London: Stainer & Bell, 1995), p.170.

External links edit

john, sheppard, composer, john, sheppard, also, shepherd, 1515, december, 1558, english, composer, renaissance, contents, biography, sources, works, masses, other, latin, music, responsories, other, liturgical, works, media, vita, english, music, editions, rec. John Sheppard also Shepherd c 1515 December 1558 was an English composer of the Renaissance Contents 1 Biography 2 Sources 3 Works 3 1 Masses 3 2 Other Latin music 3 2 1 Responsories 3 2 2 Other liturgical works 3 2 3 Media vita 3 3 English music 4 Editions 5 Recordings 6 References 7 External linksBiography editSheppard was probably born around 1515 judging from his statement in 1554 that he had been composing music for twenty years 1 Nothing certain is known about his early life The first undoubted sighting of him occurs when he was probably in his later twenties as informator choristarum at Magdalen College Oxford He served in this capacity during 1541 2 and again from 1544 8 2 Sheppard left Magdalen College in March 1548 and next appears in a list of the Gentleman of the Chapel Royal who sang at the funeral of King Edward VI in August 1553 he may have joined the chapel directly after his departure from Magdalen but because of a gap in Chapel Royal records from 1547 this is not certain 3 He presumably remained active at the chapel up to the year of his death In 1554 he supplicated apparently unsuccessfully for the degree of Doctor of Music at Oxford University stating that he had studied music for twenty years and had composed many songs 4 5 In March 1556 he witnessed the will of a fellow Gentleman of the chapel Luke Caustell and on New Year s Day 1557 he presented three rolls of songs to Mary Tudor 6 In July 1558 he and his Chapel Royal colleague Richard Edwards were granted the reversion of a lease of a manor in Kent 7 Sheppard died in December 1558 during an influenza epidemic He made his will on 1 December and was buried at St Margaret s Westminster on 21 December 8 Despite this he was awarded liveries for both the funeral of Queen Mary on 13 December and for the coronation of Elizabeth I on 15 January 1559 9 Sources editSheppard s compositions for the Latin liturgy exist exclusively in post Reformation anthologies Most are contained in two sets of partbooks the principal source of his Latin music in five or more parts is the Baldwin partbooks at Christ Church Oxford GB Och Mus 979 83 copied after 1575 10 while his four part pieces are in the so called Gyffard Partbooks GB Lbl Add 17802 5 a set of four manuscript partbooks probably copied for Dr Roger Gyffard during the 1570s 11 Much of the Gyffard music may have been composed during Sheppard s Magdalen years Gyffard had formerly been a fellow of Merton College Oxford Relatively few of the pieces in these two sources appear elsewhere Other sources supply few additional pieces beyond extracts from longer compositions His mass Cantate appears exclusively in the Forrest Heyther partbooks a Kyrie for Easter Day see below is found in the Hammond Partbooks GB Lbl Add MSS 30480 4 and elsewhere and a setting for two soloists of the troped lesson Laudes Deo for the first mass of Christmas Day is in a manuscript at Oxford GB Och Mus 45 The six part Gaude virgo Christiphera the only large scale votive antiphon by Sheppard to survive in anything more than a fragmentary state appears in a seventeenth century set of partbooks that now lacks its sixth superius book GB Ob Tenbury 807 11 the missing treble part can be partially completed with the help of other sources but is still lacking in the fully scored six voice sections 12 The sources for Sheppard s English texted music are more diverse Two sources compiled or planned during his lifetime contain a few of his anthems the Wanley Partbooks GB Ob MSS Mus Sch e 420 22 and John Day s Certaine Notes Although Day s collection was not finally published until 1565 there are reasons to believe that it was planned during the reign of Edward VI 13 The sources for Sheppard s services are all of much later date and often incomplete Works editMasses edit Of Sheppard s five surviving Mass ordinary cycles the six part Cantate is a full length sumptuous festal setting in the tradition of John Taverner constructed in units of six part polyphony alternating with a mosaic of semi choir sections The principal unifying device apart from the head motive passages at the beginning of each movement is the eight note figure F E F G A Bb G F which occurs at various points in the tenor Of the four part Mass cycles Western Wynde is based on a pre existing popular melody also forming the basis of Mass cycles by Taverner and Christopher Tye 3 In Sheppard s setting the melody migrates between the treble and the tenor Two other cycles Be not afraid and The Frences Mass are both elaborately contrapuntal and freely constructed with the former scored exclusively for men s voices Playnsong Masse for a Mene also for four voices is a much simpler work Written in a simplified notation known as strene which resembles the symbols of plainsong it utilises a technique occasionally employed to allow those able to read plainsong but not mensural notation to sing simple polyphony This plainsong style which was rhythmically uncomplicated and admitted no dissonance more complicated than a cadential suspension although there is a notable exception in Sheppard s Agnus Dei is also to be found in Taverner s Plainsong Mass although this now survives only in conventional mensural notation Sheppard s mass includes a Kyrie unlike most Sarum Mass cycles and is an alternatim setting with alternating sections of chant and polyphony Other Latin music edit On her accession in 1553 Mary Tudor determined to restore England to the Catholic faith after the Protestant years of Edward VI This entailed restoring the Latin language services of the Sarum Rite A new up to date repertoire of music was required for her chapel and Sheppard was instrumental in supplying it with suitable compositions 14 Responsories edit There are 20 responsories elaborate liturgical units sung in their most expansive form at Vespers on the more important feasts and at Matins In this form the complete responsory is sung and then followed by first a verse and secondly a doxology each of which is followed by often progressively shortened repeats of the responsory 9 Sheppard often set the responsory to five or six part polyphony with the chant sung as a cantus firmus in the tenor less commonly in the treble or mean leaving the sections that were sung by soloists the incipit verse and doxology to be chanted A good example of Sheppard s technique is his six part setting of Verbum caro the ninth responsory at Matins on Christmas Day One of the most grandiose of Sheppard s responsories is Gaude gaude gaude Maria a setting of the responsory and interpolated prosa for Second Vespers for the Feast of the Purification 15 In a few settings for All Saints Day Christmas and Lent he employs the reverse procedure providing polyphony for the soloists sections of the chant but leaving the choral section of the responsory to be sung to plainsong e g In pace in idipsum Other liturgical works edit Like Tallis Sheppard also composed alternatim hymns setting the even numbered verses in polyphony and leaving the odd numbered verses to be chanted or more probably replaced by perhaps improvised organ settings of the chant Whilst the cantus firmus in Sheppard s responds is normally in the tenor in his hymns it is usually placed in the treble Sheppard also composed a number of additional items for particularly solemn feasts of the Church calendar including settings of the Kyrie and Gradual Haec dies for Second Vespers not in this case the mass on Easter Day Of his alternatim settings of the processional psalms for the procession to the font after Second Vespers on Easter Day he completed Laudate pueri Dominum but only part of In exitu Israel leaving its completion to William Mundy and the young William Byrd Media vita edit Arguably supreme amongst all of Sheppard s compositions is his cantus firmus setting of the Lenten Nunc dimittis antiphon Media vita in morte sumus Here his innovative use of the cantus firmus in breves allows for an expansive canvas and a leisurely harmonic rhythm that effectively complement his solemn treatment of the text 16 The date and circumstances of the work s creation remain unclear because the original manuscript is lost The work might have been written for the funeral of Nicholas Ludford a fellow composer who died in the 1557 influenza epidemic 17 The work survives only in the partbooks copied by John Baldwin in the late 1570s Baldwin s copy now lacks one of the six vocal parts the tenor but since this part bore the plainsong cantus firmus it can be readily restored from contemporary chant books except possibly in the first two verses where a reconstructed tenor part may or may not be needed the music sounds complete without it Recent research has shown that the form of the work as usually performed is incorrect In particular the chanted Nunc dimittis precedes the antiphon and the scheme of the polyphonic repeats is not as extensive as previously thought 18 Sheppard s bold counterpoint has led some to question whether the surviving text contains copying errors that make the work sound more modern than it should do 17 Regardless Sheppard s Media vita has remained enduringly popular with at least nine modern commercial recordings 17 English music edit Sheppard s vernacular music has suffered seriously from the loss of manuscript sources Since he died only a month after Queen Mary his settings for the Protestant services must have been composed during the reign of Edward VI who after some experimental services in 1548 established the first Book of Common Prayer in 1549 Some of Sheppard s English texted music such as his setting of the Lord s Prayer and his cycle of metrical psalms by Thomas Sternhold in GB Lbl Add MS 15166 may have been composed for domestic recreation rather than for church use As many as ten services settings of canticles and other items for the new English Morning Prayer Evening Prayer and Communion services have been identified 19 all surviving in varying degrees of incompleteness The Second Service is noteworthy for having influenced the design of Byrd s Great Service 20 Stefan Scot has observed that the Creed of the First Service is virtually identical musically to the Creed of Tallis s untitled four part Mass in the Gyffard Partbooks 21 Sheppard s fifteen English anthems most of which are a 4 comply with the demands of the Protestant reformers for simplicity clear audible words and largely syllabic text underlay The part songs O happy dames 22 and Vain vain all our life we spend in vain 23 both a 4 are Sheppard s only known works to non sacred texts Editions editChadd David ed John Sheppard I Responsorial Music London Stainer amp Bell 1977 Print Early English Church Music 17 Sandon Nicholas ed John Sheppard II Masses London Stainer amp Bell 1976 Print Early English Church Music 18 Mateer David ed The Gyffard Partbooks I London Stainer amp Bell 2007 Print Early English Church Music 48 33 40 41 Mateer David ed The Gyffard Partbooks II London Stainer amp Bell 2009 Print Early English Church Music 51 7 15 Williamson Magnus ed John Sheppard III Hymns Psalms Antiphons and other Latin Polyphony London Stainer amp Bell 2012 Print Early English Church Music 54 Recordings editJohn Sheppard Gaude gaude gaude Maria Choir of St John s College Cambridge Andrew Nethsingha Chandos Records John Sheppard Sacred Choral Music Choir of St Mary s Cathedral Edinburgh Duncan Ferguson Delphian Records John Sheppard Christopher Tye The Clerkes of Oxenford David Wulstan Proudsound Records Church Music by John Sheppard Vol 1 The Sixteen Harry Christophers Hyperion Records Church Music by John Sheppard Vol 2 The Sixteen Harry Christophers Hyperion Records Church Music by John Sheppard Vol 3 The Sixteen Harry Christophers Hyperion Records Church Music by John Sheppard Vol 4 The Sixteen Harry Christophers Hyperion Records Ceremony and Devotion The Sixteen Harry Christophers CORO Media vita Stile Antico Harmonia Mundi Music for Compline Stile Antico Harmonia Mundi John Sheppard Media vita The Tallis Scholars Peter Phillips Gimell Records The Tallis Scholars sing Tudor Church Music Volume Two The Tallis Scholars Peter Phillips Gimell Records Western Wind Masses The Tallis Scholars Peter Phillips Gimell Records Audivi Vocem The Hilliard Ensemble ECM Records John Sheppard Media vita amp other sacred music Westminster Cathedral Choir Martin Baker Hyperion RecordsReferences edit Magnus Williamson ed John Sheppard Hymns Psalms Antiphons and other Latin Polyphony Early English Church Music 54 London Stainer amp Bell Ltd 2012 p xi Williamson John Sheppard p xi a b Hugh Benham Latin Church Music in England c 1460 1575 London Barrie amp Jenkins 1977 p 197 J R Bloxham A Register of the Members of St Mary Magdalen College Oxford London Oxford University Press 1857 p 187 Nicholas Sandon ed John Sheppard II Masses Early English Church Music 18 London Stainer amp Bell 1976 p ix London British Library Add MS 62525 f 2v Williamson John Sheppard p xvi David Wulstan Where There s a Will Musical Times 135 January 1994 pp 25 27 a b David Chadd Sheppard John Grove Music Online Oxford Music Online Oxford University Press Web 5 Feb 2016 Christ Church Library music catalogue Mus 979 83 David Mateer The Gyffard Partbooks composers owners date and provenance Royal Musical Association Research Chronicle 28 1995 pp 21 50 John Milsom Sacred songs in the chamber in John Morehen ed English Choral Practice 1400 1650 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1995 p 175 Williamson John Sheppard p 241 John Aplin The Origins of John Day s Certaine Notes Music and Letters lxii 1981 pp 295 299 Roger Bowers To chorus from quartet in John Morehen ed English Choral Practice 1400 1650 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1995 p 42 Benham p 198 Benham p 201 a b c Allen David 30 December 2020 From a 1550s Pandemic a Choral Work Still Casts Its Spell The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2 January 2021 David Skinner booklet notes for digital EP David Skinner Alamire John Sheppard Media vita in morte sumushttps www resonusclassics com freedownload INV1003 booklet pdf Stefan Scot liner notes for CD The Church Music of John Sheppard The Collected Vernacular Works Volume II Priory Records PRCD 1108 2015 Scot s authorship of the notes is revealed by Richard Turbet at http earlymusicreview com the church music of john sheppard the collected vernacular works volume ii accessed 27 Dec 2018 Richard Turbet Wings of Faith Richard Turbet uncovers a close relationship between Services by William Byrd and John Sheppard Musical Times 138 December 1997 pp 5 10 Stefan Scot liner notes for CD The Church Music of John Sheppard The Collected Vernacular Works Volume 1 Priory Records PRCD 1081 2013 John Caldwell ed The Mulliner Book Musica Britannica 1 London Stainer amp Bell 2011 p 163 John Caldwell ed Tudor Keyboard Music c 1520 1580 Musica Britannica 66 London Stainer amp Bell 1995 p 170 External links editFree scores by John Sheppard in the Choral Public Domain Library ChoralWiki Free scores by John Sheppard at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Sheppard composer amp oldid 1218502890, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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