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- Mass_for_Four_Voices abstract "The Mass for Four Voices by William Byrd (c.1540–1623) is one of three settings of the Mass Ordinary which he published in London in the early 1590s. The exact dates of publication remained unclear until 1966, when Peter Cllulow subjected them to close bibliographic analysis, tracing patterns of wear in the woodblock initials at the head of each movement. Clulow’s conclusions can be summarized thus: Four-part Mass: 1592-3 (second edition 1598–1600) Three-part Mass: 1593-4 (second edition 1598–1600) Five-part Mass: 1594-5 (no second edition known)As settings of the Catholic Mass in post-Reformation England the partbooks were highly sensitive documents and might well have resulted in the arrest of anyone caught with them. It is probably for this reason that Byrd chose not to publish the Masses as a set but individually in single bifolia which were easy to conceal. To make them more difficult to trace, the partbooks are undated, with no title-pages or prefatory material, and the printer Thomas East is not named. The project was almost certainly suggested (and financed) by Byrd’s circle of friends among the nobility and gentry in the Elizabethan Catholic community. Together with the two sets of Gradualia (1605, 1607) the Masses represent a grandiose scheme to provide a comprehensive repertory of music for the Catholic liturgy, to be sung at clandestine Mass celebrations in recusant households. These would have included Thorndon Hall and Ingatestone Hall, the two Essex country houses owned by Byrd’s main patron in the later stages of his career, Sir John Petre (later Baron Petre of Writtle) who was a close neighbour of Byrd.".
- Mass_for_Four_Voices wikiPageExternalLink watch?v=_KxdBiNp2vU.
- Mass_for_Four_Voices wikiPageExternalLink BYRD-M4H.pdf.
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- Mass_for_Four_Voices wikiPageWikiLink John_Petre,_1st_Baron_Petre.
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- Mass_for_Four_Voices wikiPageWikiLink Thorndon_Hall.
- Mass_for_Four_Voices wikiPageWikiLink Tridentine_Mass.
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- Mass_for_Four_Voices wikiPageWikiLink Votive_antiphon.
- Mass_for_Four_Voices wikiPageWikiLink William_Byrd.
- Mass_for_Four_Voices wikiPageWikiLinkText "Mass for Four Voices".
- Mass_for_Four_Voices hasPhotoCollection Mass_for_Four_Voices.
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- Mass_for_Four_Voices wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:William_Byrd.
- Mass_for_Four_Voices subject Category:Catholic_liturgy.
- Mass_for_Four_Voices subject Category:Compositions_by_William_Byrd.
- Mass_for_Four_Voices subject Category:Mass_(liturgy).
- Mass_for_Four_Voices hypernym Settings.
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- Mass_for_Four_Voices type Article.
- Mass_for_Four_Voices comment "The Mass for Four Voices by William Byrd (c.1540–1623) is one of three settings of the Mass Ordinary which he published in London in the early 1590s. The exact dates of publication remained unclear until 1966, when Peter Cllulow subjected them to close bibliographic analysis, tracing patterns of wear in the woodblock initials at the head of each movement.".
- Mass_for_Four_Voices label "Mass for Four Voices".
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- Mass_for_Four_Voices sameAs Q6784039.
- Mass_for_Four_Voices sameAs Q6784039.
- Mass_for_Four_Voices wasDerivedFrom Mass_for_Four_Voices?oldid=668750696.
- Mass_for_Four_Voices isPrimaryTopicOf Mass_for_Four_Voices.