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William Byrd (c.1540–1623)

William ByrdBorn in London at the end of 1539 or early 1540, William Byrd was the foremost composer of the Elizabethan age and among the three or four English composers since the Renaissance who have stood unequivocally as equals with their continental contemporaries. A master of keyboard music and the madrigal as well as Latin and English church music, he was an organist and member of the sovereign’s private religious establishment, the Chapel Royal. Yet he remained throughout his life a dedicated Roman Catholic who was persecuted as a recusant and who upheld through his art the old faith.

The spirit of his work survived undimmed through the neglect of the baroque and classical periods. It was only with the publication of The Byrd Edition during the 20th century, however, that the full range of his genius became evident and accessible to music lovers, an awareness enhanced by the wide range of recordings now available, performed by many of the world’s leading early music specialists.

Stainer & Bell marked the 400th anniversary of the death of William Byrd with a number of exciting initiatives to make the composer’s entire output of choral music more accessible to choirs than ever before, including a Byrd Table where you can search by title, voicing, duration and more, and the entire The Byrd Edition was made available to view online free of charge.

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