Greer, David, 1937-....
Greer, David
Greer, David Clive, 1937-
Greer, David Clive
David Greer britský dirigent a vysokoškolský pedagog muzikologie
VIAF ID: 114401319 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/114401319
Preferred Forms
- 100 0 _ ‡a David Greer ‡c britský dirigent a vysokoškolský pedagog muzikologie
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- 200 _ | ‡a Greer ‡b David ‡f 1937-....
- 100 1 _ ‡a Greer, David
- 100 1 _ ‡a Greer, David
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Greer, David Clive ‡d 1937-
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- 100 1 0 ‡a Greer, David ‡d 1937-
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Greer, David, ‡d 1937-
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Greer, David, ‡d 1937-
- 100 1 _ ‡a Greer, David, ‡d 1937-....
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4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (10)
5xx's: Related Names (1)
- 551 _ _ ‡a London
Works
Title | Sources |
---|---|
Aspects of love | |
Ayres | |
Ayres that were sung and played at Brougham Castle 1618 [for 1 to 4 voices, chorus and lute] | |
ballad | |
Bring away this sacred tree | |
But this, and then no more, it is my last and all | |
Canções | |
Cease, leaden slumber, dreaming ! | |
Chansons | |
Collected English lutenist partsongs | |
dance | |
The Discription of a maske : 1607 | |
Durham University Department of Music, via WWW, November 16, 2012 | |
Early memories | |
English Madrigal Verse : 1588-1632 | |
Fain would I change that note | |
farewell song | |
first booke of Songs | |
Fortune, love and time (2 v. (2 C)) | |
O grief ! e'en on the bud that fairly flow'red | |
Hamilton Harty : his life and music | |
I heard of late that love was falne asleepe (4 v.) | |
How can the tree but waste and wither away | |
If ever haplesse woman had a cause (4 v.) | |
If there bee any one whome love hath wounded (4 v.) | |
Journal of the Royal Musical Association | |
"O, let us howl, some heavy note": commentary and transcription [for voice and keyboard instrument], in The Duchess of Malfi, 1964: | |
Liebe, Küsse und Sehnsucht... Bounce | |
Lieder und Gesänge aus der Jugendzeit. | |
O Lord, Thy faithfulnesse and prayse (4 v.) | |
O Lord, turn not away thy face from him that lieth prostrate | |
Lords welcome | |
Manuscript inscriptions in early English printed music | |
Move now with measur'd sound | |
Musica transalpina : (1588) | |
A Musicall dreame : 1609 | |
Musicke of sundrie kindes | |
Musicology and sister disciplines : past, present, future : proceedings of the 16th International Congress of the International Musicological Society, London, 1997 | |
Now Cupid, look about thee | |
Now hath Flora robb'd her bow'rs | |
A numerous and fashionable audience: the story of Elsie Swinton, 1997: | |
Of all the birds that I do know (4 v.) | |
Poets to love such power ascribes [sic] (2 v.) | |
pretty ducke there was that said (4 v.) | |
queen of Paphos Ericine (4 v.) | |
Serenade, for voice and wind instruments | |
shadowes darkning our intents (1 v.) (Les airs sont avec luth.) | |
Short is my rest, whose toil is over-long | |
Shows and nightly revels, signs of joy and peace | |
soldier's song | |
[Songs for the lute viol and voice : 1606 | |
Surchargd with discontent (2 v. (C, B)) | |
Sweet are the thoughts that savour of content | |
Those eyes that set my fancy on a fire | |
Time, that leads the fatal round | |
Tobacco ! Tobacco ! | |
Triumph now with joy and mirth | |
Tune thy chearefull voyce to mine (3 v.) (Les airs sont avec luth.) | |
Twenty songs from printed sources | |
Ultimum vale : 1605 | |
Unto a flie tranceformd from humain kind (4 v.) | |
Vocal music. | |
What greater grief than no relief in deepest woe ? | |
What thing is love, I pray thee tel (4 v.) | |
When as we sat in Babylon the rivers round about | |
When from my love I lookte for love (4 v.) | |
Whether runeth my sweethart (2 v.) | |
Who doth behold my misters face (4 v.) | |
Woo her and win her, he that can | |
I would that you were not fayre or I were wise (4 v.) |