Fellowes, Edmund Horace, 1870-1951
Fellowes, Edmund H., 1870-1951
Fellowes, Edmund Horace
Fellowes, Edmund H.
Edmund Fellowes British musician
Fellowes, Edmund, 1870-1951.
VIAF ID: 37185180 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/37185180
Preferred Forms
- 100 0 _ ‡a Edmund Fellowes ‡c British musician
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- 200 _ | ‡a Fellowes ‡b Edmund Horace ‡f 1870-1951
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Fellowes, Edmund H. ‡d 1870-1951
- 100 1 0 ‡a Fellowes, Edmund H. ‡d 1870-1951
- 100 1 _ ‡a Fellowes, Edmund H., ‡d 1870-1951
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Fellowes, Edmund Horace
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Fellowes, Edmund Horace
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Fellowes, Edmund Horace, ‡d 1870-1951
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4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (37)
5xx's: Related Names (7)
- 551 1 _ ‡a London
- 551 _ _ ‡a Paddington ‡4 ortg ‡4 https://d-nb.info/standards/elementset/gnd#placeOfBirth
- 510 2 _ ‡a St George Chapel (Windsor Castle) ‡b choir
- 510 _ _ ‡5 z ‡a St George Chapel ‡c Windsor Castle ‡b choir
- 551 1 _ ‡a Tenbury
- 551 _ _ ‡a Windsor ‡4 orts ‡4 https://d-nb.info/standards/elementset/gnd#placeOfDeath
- 551 1 _ ‡a Windsor
Works
Title | Sources |
---|---|
As Vesta was from Latmos Hill descending | |
Ayres for four voices | |
Balletts. | |
Calm was the air and clear the sky | |
Canciones | |
Cançons. | |
Canzonets for two and three voices | |
Canzonets or short little airs to five and six voices, c1913: | |
The catalogue of manuscripts in the library of St. Michael's college, Tenbury | |
Come away, come sweet love | |
Concertino for piano and string orchestra | |
English cathedral music | |
English lute-songs (Stainer & Bell). | |
English madrigal verse 1588-1632 ... 1920. | |
English school of lutenist song writers. | |
English school of lutenist song writers | |
Fair Orian, in the morn | |
Fair Phyllis I saw | |
Fantasieën. | |
Fantazia | |
Farewell, fond youth | |
Fifty songs : for high voice | |
The first book of Ayres (1597, 1600, 1603, 1606, 1613) | |
first part | |
For all the Saints | |
Forty Elizabethan songs | |
Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina | |
Gradualia | |
Humour, say what mak'st thou here ? | |
If my complaints could passions move | |
In this trembling shadow cast | |
Joy doth arise and so content mee | |
Ladie those eyes of yours, that shines so cleerly | |
lady Oriana | |
Let every sharp in sharp tune figure | |
Liederen. | |
Long live fair Oriana | |
O lux | |
Madrigals | |
Memoirs of an amateur musician | |
Miserere | |
Mother, I will have a husband | |
My heart and tongue were twins | |
My robbin | |
Nine fantasies for strings : in three parts | |
Non nobis, Domine | |
Now let her change and spare not | |
Now what is love | |
nymphs and shepherds danced | |
On a time in summer season | |
Orlando Gibbons : a short account of his life and work | |
Orlando Gibbons and his family : the last of the Tudor School of musicians | |
Penelope, that longed for the sight | |
Per naturam. Synophe | |
Psalms, songs, and sonnets. | |
Say, deere, will you not have me | |
Say, love, if ever thou didst find | |
second part | |
Sing we at pleasure | |
So beauty on the waters stood | |
So whilom learnt that mighty Jewish swain | |
Songs or Ayres | |
Springtime mantleth every bough | |
Sweet Kate | |
Sweet, stay a while ! Why will you rise? | |
Tell me, o love | |
The third booke of songs (1603) | |
Thirsis, let let some pittie move thee | |
This sweet and merry month of May | |
Thou pretty bird how do I see | |
Though Philomela lost her love | |
Tickle my toe | |
Tudor church music | |
Village Organist. A Series of Pieces for church and general use, edited by J. Stainer and F. Cunningham Woods. Volume I [-VIII] | |
Whether away so fast | |
Will said to his mammy | |
William Byrd | |
With angel's face and brightness | |
Works [from old catalog] | |
wyche |