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Thomas Campion
Born: February 12, 1567; London, England   Died: March 1, 1620; London, England  
With John Dowland (ca. 1563-1626), Campion was one of the most prolific composers of English lute songs, or Ayres. A true "renaissance man," Campion also wrote masques for court performances, a critique of English poetry and, in 1613, a treatise on counterpoint. He was also a trained physician. His works were widely disseminated; the best of them demonstrate a capacity for elegant melodic lines that perfectly matches the rhythm of English verse. ...
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English Fancy - Purcell, Jenkins, Campion / Fortin, Masques
Release Date: 11/23/2004   Label: Analekta   Catalog: 29905   Number of Discs: 1
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Works
(21) Ayres: I care not for these ladies (1)
A secret love or two, I must confesse (1)
A Wedding Maske: Move now with measured sound (3)
A Wedding Maske: Now hath Flora rob'd her bowers (2)
A Wedding Maske: Shows and nightly revels (1)
All lookes be pale (1)
All lookes be pale, harts cold as stone (2)
All lookes be pale, harts cold as stone, for voice & bass viol (or 2 voices) (1)
Are you what your faire lookes expresse? (1)
As by the Streams of Babylon (1)
Author of light, revive my dying spright (9)
Author of Light, Revive My Dying Spright for voice, lute & bass viol (1)
Awake thou spring of speaking grace, mute rest becomes not thee (1)
Beauty is but a painted hell (2)
Beauty, since you so much desire (4)
Blame not my cheekes, though pale with love they be (1)
Breake now my heart and dye, Oh no, she may relent (3)
Care charming sleep (1)
Come away, arm'd with loves delights (3)
Come chearful day, part of my life to mee (2)
Come let us sound with melodie the praises (3)
Come, Cheerful Day, Part of My Life to Mee for voice, lute & bass viol (1)
Come, you pretty false-ey'd wanton (2)
Come, You Pretty False-Ey'd Wanton for voice, lute & bass viol (2)
Comes the morning (1)
Could my heart have more tongues employ (1)
Cypress curtain of the night (1)
Faine Would I Wed a Faire Yong Man for voice, lute & bass viol (1)
Faine would I wed a faire yong man, that day and night could please mee (7)
Faire, if you expect admiring (5)
Fire, fire, fire, fire loe here I burne (6)
First Booke of Ayres, 'Divine and Morall Songs': Sing a song of joy (4vv) (1)
Fourth Booke of Ayres: Faine would I wed a faire young man (1)
Give beauty all her right (2)
Harke all you ladies that doo sleepe (1)
Her rosie cheekes, her ever smiling eyes (2)
I care not for these ladies (15)
I must complain, yet doe enjoy my love (1)
If Thou Long'st So Much to Learn for voice, lute & bass viol (1)
If thou long'st so much to learne what 'tis to love (3)
It fell on a sommers daie (8)
It Fell on a Sommers Daie for voice, lute & bass viol (1)
Jacke and Jone they thinke no ill (3)
Kinde are her answers (2)
Leave prolonging thy distresse (2)
Love me or not, love her I must or dye (1)
Most sweet and pleasing are thy waes O God (1)
Move now with measured sound (1)
My love hath vowed hee will forsake mee (5)
My sweetest Lesbia, let us live and love (4)
Never love unlesse you can (4)
Never Love Unlesse You Can for voice, lute & bass viol (1)
Never Weather-Beaten Sail for voice, lute & bass viol (4)
Never weather-beaten saile more willing bent to shore (13)
Now hath Flora rob'd her bowers (2)
Now hath Flora robb'd her bower (1)
O deare that I with thee might live (2)
O never to be moved (1)
Oft have I sigh'd for him that heares me not (5)
Oft Have I Sigh'd for Him That Heares Me Not for voice, lute & bass viol (2)
Peaceful Westerne Winde (8)
Peaceful Westerne Winde, for 3 voices (1)
Pin'd I am, and like to dye (1)
Psalm 34, for chorus & organ (1)
Second Booke of Ayres, 'Light Conceits of Lovers': The peacefull westerne winde (1)
See where she flies enrag'd from me (2)
Shall I come sweet love to thee? (6)
Shall I Come Sweet Love to Thee? for voice, lute & bass viol (1)
Sing a song of joy (3)
So try'd are all my thoughts, that sence and spirits faile (1)
Sweet exclude me not nor be divided (5)
The sypres curten of the night is spread (8)
There is a garden in her face (2)
There is none, O none but you (1)
Third Booke of Ayres: Breake now my heart and dye (1)
Thou joy'st fond boy, to be by many loved (1)
Though you are yoong and I am olde (2)
Thrice Toss These Oaken Ashes in the Ayre for voice, lute & bass viol (1)
To musicke bent is my retyred minde (1)
Tune thy musicke to thy hart (2)
Turne all thy thoughts to eyes (1)
Turne backe you wanton flier (2)
Vayle love mine eyes, O hide from me (1)
What if a day (1)
What is it that all men possesse, among themselves conversing? (1)
When to her lute Corinna sings (1)
When to her lute Corrina sings (4)
Woo her and win her (1)
Wooe her, and win her, he that can (3)
Your faire lookes (1)
Biography by John Palmer
With John Dowland (ca. 1563-1626), Campion was one of the most prolific composers of English lute songs, or Ayres. A true "renaissance man," Campion also wrote masques for court performances, a critique of English poetry and, in 1613, a treatise on counterpoint. He was also a trained physician. His works were widely disseminated; the best of them demonstrate a capacity for elegant melodic lines that perfectly matches the rhythm of English verse. Unlike most composers of songs, he wrote all of the poems he set to music himself.

Campion's father, John, was a cursitor of the Chancery Court; his mother, Lucy, had a significant sum of money from her previous marriage. On February 12, 1567, Thomas Campion was baptized at the church of St. Andrew, Holborn. Campion left home in 1581, matriculating at Peterhouse, Cambridge, but never completing a degree. In 1586 he entered Gray's Inn, one of the Inns of Court at which young noblemen learned "the ropes" of court life. There he established contacts with potential patrons, in part through his participation in performances of masques attended by members of the nobility, including Queen Elizabeth.

By the early 1590s Campion had become known as a poet; in 1595 he published a book of Latin poems that was particularly well received. His first collection of songs came six years later (1601) as part of Philip Rosseter's A Book of Ayres, the second half of which featured songs by Rosseter. In 1602 Campion's Observations on the Art of English Poesie appeared, in which he discussed rhyme, the structure of poetry, and the proper meters to use when setting English; his skillful setting of English texts is, arguably, the most impressive aspect of his music. For the next decade, Campion concentrated on the contribution of music to masques, including two printed as The Lords Maske, written in 1613. Unfortunately, only the texts of these works survive.

Campion studied medicine at the University of Caen, earning his M.D. on February 10, 1605. This did not derail his compositional activities, however: he composed masques for performance at the court of James I, and his Two Bookes of Ayres was published ca. 1614. A year later he was accused of participating in the plot to murder Sir Thomas Overby by the Earl and Countess of Somerset; however, Campion's name was eventually cleared. The Third and Fourth Booke of Ayres appeared in either 1617 or 1618, and Campion's last published work, Tho. Campiani epigrammatum libi II, was printed in 1619.

All of Campion's Ayres were for solo voice with lute accompaniment; however, many of the songs were printed with the parts for alto, tenor, and bass extracted from the lute texture. His attention to proper text setting of each verse of a poem is remarkable. Although he generally avoided superficial word-painting, he was not above the occasional illustrative passage. For example, in "Mistris since you so much desire," Campion sets the line, "but a little higher," four times in succession, each statement a step higher than the previous. His strict adherence to the rules of four-part counterpoint laid out in his treatise lends a measure of predictability to some of his Ayres, but the best examples show a composer capable of exquisite melodic tailoring, skillful contrapuntal writing, and technical mastery of the lute.
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