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John Bull
Born: 1562; Old Radnor, Radnorshire, England   Died: March 12, 1628; Antwerp, Belgium  
John Bull, an early example of the species of virtuoso performer/composer, lived in a time of cultural and political ferment in England. Unlike most of his contemporaries, however, he traveled extensively and became acquainted with the musical styles of other European countries, particularly the Netherlands.

At about age 11 Bull became a chorister and, nine years later, organist at Hereford Cathedral. In 1574, when only 22 years old, he
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Works
Alman in D major (1)
Almighty God, which by the leading of a star (The Starre Anthem) (1)
Almighty God, who by the leading "Starre Anthem" (3)
Bonny Pegge of Ramsey (1)
Bonny Sweet Robin, MB 65 (1)
Canon in subdiapente (1)
Christe redemptor omnium, K 33 (1)
Chromatic Pavan and Galliard "Queen Elizabeth's" (6)
Coranto "Alarm" (3)
Coranto "Battle" (3)
Den lustelijcken mey (2)
Doctor Bull's goodnight (2)
Doctor Bull's My Selfe (1)
Dr Bulls My Selfe for keyboard (No 189 in the Fitzwilliam Virginal Book), MB 138 (5)
Duke of Brunswick's Alman (1)
Dutch Dance (1)
Een Kindeken is ons geboren (4)
Fantasia for keyboard (on Sweelinck) (1)
Fantasia for keyboard, MB 11 (1)
Fantasia for Keyboard, MB 12 (1)
Fantasia no 10 (1)
Fantasia no 12 (1)
Fantasia primi toni (1)
Fantastic Galliard (3)
Fantastic Pavan (3)
Fantasy a 4 (1)
Fantasy for Keyboard no 1 on "Vestiva i colli", K 8 (1)
Fantasy for Keyboard no 2 on "Vestiva i colli", K 9 (1)
Fantasy for Keyboard on a canzona by Guami, K 3 "La Guamina" (1)
Fantasy for Keyboard, K 7 "A Leona" (1)
Fantasy(s) for Organ (1)
Fitzwilliam Virginal Book: Lord Lumley's Pavane and Galliard (2)
Fitzwilliam Virginal Book: no 43, Praeludium (1)
Fitzwilliam Virginal Book: Ut re mi fa so la (1)
Galliard and Variation in D minor (1)
Galliard for Keyboard, K 103 (1)
Galliard for Keyboard, K 71 (1)
Galliard for Keyboard, K 73 (1)
Galliard for Keyboard, MB 129a "Lord Lumley" (1)
Galliard for Keyboard, MB 66b (1)
Galliard for Keyboard, MB 67b "Melancholy" (1)
Galliard for Keyboard, MB 87b "Chromatic" (1)
Germani's Almain (1)
Hexachord Fantasia (1)
In nomine (5)
In Nomine 4, for keyboard, MB 23 (1)
In nomine for 5 Viols (3)
In Nomine for keyboard (Musica Britannica No 12) (1)
In nomine no 1 (1)
In nomine no 11 (1)
In nomine no 12 (3)
In nomine no 2 (1)
In nomine no 3 (1)
In nomine no 9 (3)
Irish toy (2)
Italian Galliard (1)
King's Hunt (12)
Laet ons met herten reijne (3)
Les buffons (1)
Melancholy Pavan and Galliard (1)
My grief (2)
Pavan "Sinfoniae" (1)
Pavan and Galliard "St. Thomas Wake" (2)
Pavan and Galliard "Trumpet": Pavan (2)
Pavan for Keyboard, MB 129a "Lord Lumley" (1)
Pavan for Keyboard, MB 66a (1)
Pavan for Keyboard, MB 67a "Melancholy" (1)
Pavan for Keyboard, MB 87a "Chromatic" (2)
Pavane (1)
Piper's Galliard (1)
Praeludium (2)
Prelude "Doric Music" (1)
Prelude for Keyboard, MB 117 (1)
Prelude for Keyboard, MB 84 (1)
Prelude(s) for Organ (1)
Prince's Galliard (1)
Quadran Galliard (ii) (1)
Quadran Galliard (iii) (1)
Quadran Pavan (ii) (1)
Quadran Pavan (iii) (1)
Regina Galliard (1)
Salvator mundi (1)
Salve Regina (1)
Salve regina no 1, K 40 (1)
Spanish Pavan (2)
The Duchesse of Brunswick's Toye (2)
The Duke of Brusnwick's Alman (1)
Trumpet Pavan (Musica Britannica, 128A) (1)
Vaulting Galliard (1)
Walsingham (4)
Walsingham, for keyboard, MB 85 (1)
Why ask you (3)
Why ask you, MB 62 (1)
Why ask you, MB 63 (1)
Why ask you, MB 64 (1)
Work(s): In nomine (Fitzwilliam Virginal Book, No. 37) (1)
Biography by Roy Brewer
John Bull, an early example of the species of virtuoso performer/composer, lived in a time of cultural and political ferment in England. Unlike most of his contemporaries, however, he traveled extensively and became acquainted with the musical styles of other European countries, particularly the Netherlands.

At about age 11 Bull became a chorister and, nine years later, organist at Hereford Cathedral. In 1574, when only 22 years old, he was appointed Master of the Choristers at the Cathedral, and in the same year to a similar post at the Chapel Royal of King Charles I in London. His subsequent career might have easily been lived out in the cloistered calm of great churches was it not that Bull was a reckless, argumentative man who courted disaster in both his private and public life.

Bull graduated as Doctor of Music at both Cambridge and Oxford Universities (1589 and 1592). From 1597, when he was a Public Reader at Gresham College, London, he frequently fell foul of the College authorities and in 1607, the year he was married, was forced to resign. However, despite journeys abroad as an organ consultant, he continued as organist at the King's Chapel.

In 1613, Bull was charged with adultery and fled to the Netherlands, claiming religious persecution as the reason for his sudden departure. During his flight from England, many of Bull's manuscripts were lost, though 120 canons, a dozen or so anthems and a large quantity of keyboard music survived.

In 1614, diplomatic pressures from England brought dismissal from a post Bull held in Brussels with Archduke Albert, and in 1617 he moved to Antwerp Cathedral as organist, an appointment he held until his death.

One of the composers of the a golden age of English choral and keyboard music that includes Byrd and Tallis, Bull frequently used the "free-voiced" textures that mark the period of transition from Renaissance to early Baroque, yet his sacred music reflects the contrapuntal complexity of J.S. Bach. His intricate plainsong settings and hexachord fantasias for organ also show a continental influence; the virginal music is more English in character, and includes highly ornamented variations and fantasias. Under Bull's influence, the simple melodic style of popular songs and folk tunes became a starting-point for elaborate excursions into keyboard virtuosity; the anthems and multi-part canons are more direct in feeling, and preserve the formal structures of English masters such as Tallis.
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