excerpt from 'Music and Society in Eighteenth-Century Yorkshire' pp. 179 (101 words)
excerpt from 'Music and Society in Eighteenth-Century Yorkshire' pp. 179 (101 words)
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In music he succeeded better than in painting. He performed decently on the harpsichord, and, by his desire, I undertook to teach him the principles of composition, but that I never could effect. Indeed, others before me had also failed in the attempt; nevertheless, he fancied himself qualified to compose: for a short anthem of his beginning, “Lord of all power and might,” was performed at the chapel royal, of which, only the melody is his own, the bass was composed by another person. The same may be said of two more anthems sung in the cathedral of York. |
appears in search results as | excerpt from 'Music and Society in Eighteenth-Century Yorkshire' pp. 179 (101 words) |
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