The origins of the infamous ‘Agincourt Carol’, celebrating Henry V's military campaign of 1415, have often been the subject of fanciful speculation, but very little concrete evidence has so far been discovered. This article reports the new discovery that the carol's text relates closely to other poems celebrating the event, and may have been their source. It explores in more detail the surviving accounts of the victory pageant mounted in London on the king's return, during which the carol may have been performed. New evidence concerning the carol's earliest musical source has allowed a more precise dating and possible provenance to be established, elucidating the musical and literary worlds in which this most intriguing of medieval songs wa...
Part I of the dissertation is a comprehensive study of an important music manuscript dating 1509-25 ...
This thesis uses the joint approaches of theatre research and musicology to reveal the overlooked so...
This article investigates occasional anthems written for the Chapel Royal by Henry Purcell, John Blo...
Late medieval carols have long been thought to descend from the carole, inheriting name and form fr...
The fifteenth century saw the development of a substantial body of English songs known as carols, ch...
The best known of all English carols (also called the Agincourt Song), this composition celebrates t...
The aim of this paper is to reorganize English carol containing manuscripts and printed books that w...
The late medieval carol is an important indigenous musical form that is abundant in a number of sour...
Details: This chapter examines the evidence for choral practice in York, examining all York's survi...
The manuscript Great Britain, London; British Library, Egerton 3307 has never been studied in its en...
In a masterly study published in The Review of English Studies in 1981, P. J. Croft reconstructed th...
The so-called ‘Hamond’ partbooks (British Library, Add. MSS 30480-4) were copied over a period of c....
The three volumes under review represent a relatively recent stage in the transmission of medieval a...
The English Shepherds' Carols are herein viewed through illumination by the other arts of the mediev...
Ever since Hugh Baillie and Philippe Oboussier's pioneering study of York, Borthwick Institute MS Mu...
Part I of the dissertation is a comprehensive study of an important music manuscript dating 1509-25 ...
This thesis uses the joint approaches of theatre research and musicology to reveal the overlooked so...
This article investigates occasional anthems written for the Chapel Royal by Henry Purcell, John Blo...
Late medieval carols have long been thought to descend from the carole, inheriting name and form fr...
The fifteenth century saw the development of a substantial body of English songs known as carols, ch...
The best known of all English carols (also called the Agincourt Song), this composition celebrates t...
The aim of this paper is to reorganize English carol containing manuscripts and printed books that w...
The late medieval carol is an important indigenous musical form that is abundant in a number of sour...
Details: This chapter examines the evidence for choral practice in York, examining all York's survi...
The manuscript Great Britain, London; British Library, Egerton 3307 has never been studied in its en...
In a masterly study published in The Review of English Studies in 1981, P. J. Croft reconstructed th...
The so-called ‘Hamond’ partbooks (British Library, Add. MSS 30480-4) were copied over a period of c....
The three volumes under review represent a relatively recent stage in the transmission of medieval a...
The English Shepherds' Carols are herein viewed through illumination by the other arts of the mediev...
Ever since Hugh Baillie and Philippe Oboussier's pioneering study of York, Borthwick Institute MS Mu...
Part I of the dissertation is a comprehensive study of an important music manuscript dating 1509-25 ...
This thesis uses the joint approaches of theatre research and musicology to reveal the overlooked so...
This article investigates occasional anthems written for the Chapel Royal by Henry Purcell, John Blo...