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- Q18161697 subject Q9003649.
- Q18161697 subject Q9094750.
- Q18161697 abstract "Nymphs and Shepherds is a song by the English composer Henry Purcell, from the play The Libertine by Thomas Shadwell. When the play was first performed, in 1675, the accompanying music was by William Turner. Purcell's music was first used in either 1692 or 1695; the musicologist Ian Spink has concluded that the latter year is the more probable, although the earlier date is often cited.The Libertine is a version of the Don Juan legend. The song "Nymphs and shepherds, come away" occurs in a pastoral interlude at the beginning of Act IV, after an orchestral introduction – a "Symphony of Rustick Musick". In the nineteenth century it became a popular concert piece, generally for soprano voice, and a second stanza, by William Hayman Cummings, was added to Shadwell's original verse.Nymphs and shepherds, come away,In this grove let's sport and play;For this is Flora's holiday,Sacred to ease and happy love,To music, to dancing and to poetry.Your flocks may now securely restWhile you express your jollity!Nymphs and shepherds, pipe and play,Tune a song, a festal lay;For this is Flora's holiday,Sacred to ease and happy love,To music, to dancing and to poetry. Then trip we round with merry sound,And pass the day in jollity!↑ 1.0 1.1 ↑ 2.0 2.1 ↑ 3.0 3.1".
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- Q18161697 wikiPageWikiLink Q9003649.
- Q18161697 wikiPageWikiLink Q9094750.
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- Q18161697 comment "Nymphs and Shepherds is a song by the English composer Henry Purcell, from the play The Libertine by Thomas Shadwell. When the play was first performed, in 1675, the accompanying music was by William Turner. Purcell's music was first used in either 1692 or 1695; the musicologist Ian Spink has concluded that the latter year is the more probable, although the earlier date is often cited.The Libertine is a version of the Don Juan legend.".
- Q18161697 label "Nymphs and Shepherds".