and other instrumental pieces bearing characteristic titles
included in anthologies of Elizabethan and Jacobean music.
The rare titles with the wording as it occurs in the form appearing in Shakespeare plays are shown in capitals in the main text; many have come down to us as tunes, most often in lute tablature, whose original text is no longer traceable and so the significance of the names of tunes may well be lost. This survey attempts to give clear indications of which publications of this tuneful repertoire have been made available. In some cases editors have found certain material useful as a basis on which to underlay the many Shakespeare song texts for which no specific music has come down to us.
Bibliographical reference to dance, song types and other pieces are incorporated in the main survey bearing a sequence number up to 415 in the right hand column, and complementing these, from 416 onwards are to be found a great many in the NOTES, GLOSSARY which is ranged alphabetically and provides descriptions of the genres and other key words with further repertoire suggestions some of which may prove potential candidates as incidental music in the production of the plays.
Where two or more sequence numbers are shown, the main source of bibliographical information together with the musical incipit will be found between 1and 415, otherwise at the number in bold print. Included here is repertoire bearing a characteristic rather than a form title alone. For the pieces for which a composer is attributed, their names are indicated within curves after a title; fuller detail will be found in the main text under the setting number and in the Composer index.
A
A see following word, e.g. for ‘A poor soul sat sighing’, see under Poor | |
A la bataglia (Isaac) | 513 |
A la mode de la France (major version of ‘Nonesuch’) | 140 |
A Port (Dall) | 140 |
A Re masque | 290 |
A Robin (Cornysh) | 362 |
Abradad (attrib. Farrant) | 1431 |
Adew for Master Oliver Cromwell (Dowland) | 1255 |
Adew, adew my hertes lust (Cornysh) | 798 |
Adieu, fond love, lute song (Robert Johnson) | 1205 |
Adieu, Madame à 4 (Henry VIII) | 1003 |
Adieu, mes amours (Cornysh) | 1002 |
Adieu, O daisy of delight (Blackhall) | 1410 |
A-down, a down, see also Down-a-down and Hey, down a down | 47 |
Adson’s Sarabande | 1391A |
Aeneas, wandering Prince of Troy | 37 i, ii, 324 |
King of Africa, lute, see ‘Old Almain’ (Battle of) Agincourt (ballad set to ‘Flying Fame’) | 75 |
Agincourt song (A King went forth to Normandy) | 70b |
Ah, alas ye salt sea gods, consort song (Farrant, attrib. Parsons) | 1431 |
Ah, dear Heart (Gibbons) | 649 |
Ah Robin (Cornysh) | 1b, 362, 812 |
Ah silly poor Joas, consort song | 1045 |
Ah the sighs (Cornysh) | 370a, 813, 1000 |
Air de mourisques | 1186 |
Alarm (Bull) | 419 |
Alas my love ye do me wrong, see Greensleeves | |
Albart, pavane of | 424 |
Alison’s knell (Alison, arr. Morley) | 109b |
All a green willow, galliard (All of grene willowe) | 251b, 840 |
All in a garden green, country dance (Gathering pescods) | 15d, 694 |
All into service à 3 (Ravenscroft) | 51c, 52c |
All of grene willowe, galliard, see All a green willow | |
All people that on earth do dwell (Day’s Psalter) | 107e |
All ye that love good fellows, (Nancie), lute tune | 221 |
Allegra, Anglia, catch à 4 | 621 |
Allemande d’Anvers (Phalèse) | 426 |
Allemande (du) Prince et reprise (Gervaise) | 424 |
Allemande Fortune, Hélas pour quoi | 182 |
Allemande prynce | |
Allemande savoye (Phalèse) | 424 |
Alleyn’s (Allin’s) jig, lute (Gathering pescods) | 16a |
Almande guerre guerre gay | 350a |
Aloe (Dowland) | 382b |
Alta carretta (Lupi) | 1541 |
Amarilli mia bella (Caccini) | 959 |
Amazonian’s masque (Amazons’ dance} | 247, 318a |
Amongst the harlots foul (Spanish pavane) | 263a |
And a derry and a down | 386 |
And down, down, a down-a | 176, 616 |
And dub me knight, Samingo | 66 |
And here cometh my dog | 485 |
And I as well as thou, à 3 (Michael East) | 654 |
And I were a maiden | 99 |
And let me not the canakin clink | 247, (750) |
And pale Cynthia with her borrowed light | 393 |
And Robin Hood, Scarlet and John | 68c, 175 |
And sword and shield | 72 |
And was not good King Solomon (Was not GoodKing Solomon) | 276b |
And will he not come again? | 49 |
And would you see my mistress’ face (Rosseter) | 32b |
Der ander Mascherada, the 2nd of the Princes (Johnson) | 453, 1154 |
Andrew Barton: country dance | 338 |
Aniseed water Robin (Irish lady) | 952 |
Antoinette, galliard (Arbeau) | 836 |
The Antycke (Les Bouffons) | 106b |
The ape, the monkey and baboon (Weelkes) | 481, 1171 |
The Apes’ dance at The Temple | 486, 1497 |
Aria del Gran Duca (Bésart, Cavalieri, Philips, Sweelinck, Zanetti) | 1514 |
Aria della Battaglia à 8 (Andrea Gabrieli, adovano) | 515-6, 1542 |
Arthur a Bradley (Thou canst not hit it?) | 146 |
As at noon Dulcina rested (Dulcina, earlier tune) | 22d, 179, 183, 201e |
As duly but not truly | 72 |
As I walked forth (Robert Johnson) | 1106 |
As I went to Walsingham, see Walsingham | |
As it fell on a holy day (+ Ravenscroft) | 247, 817 |
As it fell on a holy eve, coranto (Holborne) | 64 |
As ye came from the holy land, see Walsingham | |
Au joli bois à 3 (Clemens non papa, also attrib. Sermisy) | 911 |
Aufzug zu Greenwich, exit dance | 313 g iii |
Auld Cloak (Old cloak) | 247b |
Aux echos des bois, Romanesca | 146e |
Awake, awake, O England | 77 |
Awake sweet love, lute song (Dowland) | 1088 |
Awake ye woeful wights, lute song (Edwards) | 42b, 1078 |
Away the foul fiend | 129 |
B
Babity Bowster, cushion dance | 721 |
Baboon’s dance (‘The Bavion’) (Robert Johnson) | 386k, 485, 1149 |
Bachelor’s delight, see Batchelar’s delight | |
Back and sides go bare | 141 |
The Baffled knight | 176a |
The bagpipe and drone (attrib. Byrd) | 407, 526 |
A bagpipe hornpipe | 492, 929 |
Baisons nous belle, galliard (Arbeau) | 152, 834 |
Ballad of…see title (e.g. Robin Goodfellow) | |
Il Ballarino (Caroso) | 142 |
Ballet angloys | 332d |
Ballet des Bacchanales (Praetorius) | 62c, 751 |
Ballet des Coqs (Praetorius) | 561 |
Ballet des Matelotz (Praetorius) | 1430 |
Ballet des Princesses (Praetorius) | 496 |
Ballet des Sorciers (Praetorius) | 1460 |
Ballet du roi pour sonner après (Praetorius) | 718 |
Ballo del Gran Duca del Toscana (Bésart) | 1451 |
Ballo delle ingrate (Monteverdi) | 739 |
Ballo di Mantova (Zanetti) | 1543 |
Bandalashot, galliard | 47a ii |
Bara Fostus’ dream (The Shepherd’s joy) (+attrib. Byrd, Farnaby, Kete) | 201b, 218, 333b, 1454, 1489 |
La Barca, saltarello | 828 |
Barley break, folk dance (+ Byrd, Morley) | 62d, 415c, 711 |
Basela un trato, gagliarda | 846 |
La Bataile, pavane (Susato, after Jannequin ‘La Guerre’) | 510, 1237 |
Batchelar’s delight (Alison) | 607, 1544 |
Battaglia, battle call (Italian anon.) | 509 |
Battaglia à 8 (Andrea Gabrieli) | 515 |
Batterie de tambour: Gardes de la Marine | 109, 1126 |
Battle (‘Mr Byrd’s Battell’) see under Byrd in Composer index (attribution) | |
Battle and no battle (Bull) | 535 |
Battle coranto (Bull) | 534 |
Battle galliard, lute version of King of Denmark’s galliard (Dowland) | 357, 512, 867 |
Battle of Agincourt (set to ‘Flying fame’) | 55b, 75 |
Battle pavan and galliard (Bull; also attrib. Nicholson) | 536-7 |
The bavion, see Baboon’s dance | |
Be merry, be merry, my wife has all | (62a-68a), 63a |
Be thy mouth or black or white (incantation) | 137 |
Bear’s dance | 402, 1152 |
Beauty sat bathing (Jones) | 284, 1111 |
Because of the traitor I die, galliard (Arbeau ‘La Traditore my fa morire’) | 372, 833 |
Beckington’s Pound, lute (Cutting) | 303b |
Before you can say ‘Come’ and ‘Go’ before | 310 |
The beggar and the king | 267, (997-9) |
The beggar boy, country dance | 1405 |
Beginning of the world, see ‘Sellenger’s Round’ | |
Belle qui tiens ma vie, pavan (Arbeau) | 151c, 172c, 315, 670, 1242, 1479 |
The Bells (Byrd) | 191c, 217d, 540 |
The Bells (‘A knell of Johnson’) (Robert Johnson) | 540, 1074 |
(Twenty ways upon) the bells (Robinson) | 542, 1074 |
Bergamask (‘Quodlings’ delight’ tune/ ‘Goddesses’ + Farnaby) | 193 |
La Bergamaska, ground (+ Bull, Frescobaldi, Scheidt) | 215b, 361, 411b, 544-6 |
Bergeret sans Roche (Susato) | 1449 |
El bison, passamezzo pavan | 1259 |
The Black Almain (Mésur, lute) | 430 |
Black Spirits | 160 |
Blackamoor’s dance à 5 (Brade) | 151f, 565, 1190 |
Blame not my lute, lute song (‘La Gamba’) | 1116, 1268, 1389 |
Blew cap, country dance, see Blue cap | |
The Blind beggar (Pretty Bessie) | 404b |
Blow, blow, thou winter wind | 16 |
Blow thy horn hunter (Cornysh à 3: ATB; Ravenscroft à 4) | 814, 942-3 |
Blue cap, (Blew cap), country dance | 1406 |
Bona speranza à 5 (Holborne) | 222 |
Bonny, bonny broom, see under ‘Broome’ | |
Bonny Robin, see under ‘Bonny Sweet…’ | 391 |
Bonny Peg o’Ramsey (Bull) | 346 |
(For) Bonny sweet Robin is all my joy (+ Bull, Byrd, Dowland, Farnaby, Holborne, Mundy, Robinson, Simpson) | 48, 120d, 192, 494 |
The Boon companion | 386b |
(Pavane des) Bouffons (Buffons, Buffens) (‘John come kiss me now’) (+ Bull, Estrées, Eyck) | 106b, 149c, 566, 735 |
La Bounette | 52b, 715 |
La Bourrée (‘Parson’s farewell’ Praetorius) | 712, 1437 |
Boute-selle, sennet | 1438 |
Brande d’Angleterre (‘Sellenger’s round’) | 188d |
Brande yrlandt, Lord Zouche’s maske (Vallet) | 225a |
Brangill of Poictu, see ‘Branle de Poitou’ | |
Branle coupé de la guerre (Arbeau) | 590 |
Branle de Bourgogne (Gervaise) | 602A |
Branle des chevaux, allemande ‘Le pied de cheval’ (Arbeau) | 601-2 |
Branle d’Ecosse (Arbeau) | 605, 1401 |
Branle de la cornemuse (Ballard) | 493 |
Branle de la haye (Arbeau) | 23a, 149a, 153a, 407b, (592), 924 |
Branle de l’Officiel | 593 |
Branle de la torche (Arbeau, Praetorius) | 591 |
Branle de Poitou (Gervaise, Arbeau) | 23b ii, 589, 1369 |
Branle des sabots (Arbeau) | 144, 593A |
Branle des villages (Praetorius) | 594-5 |
branle double (Arbeau, Praetorius) | 23b i, 104b i, 572-9 |
Branle du Haut Barrois (Arbeau) | 104b, 313c, 600 |
branle gay (Arbeau, Caroubel) | 579-588 |
branle gay nouveau (Moderne) | 588 |
Branle Hoboeken (Susato) | 568 |
Branle mauresque | 1186 |
Branle simple (Arbeau) | 569-571 |
Brave Lord Willougby, tune for ‘Rowand’ see Willougby | |
The Brawls, see Branles above | |
Bray, pavane and galliard (Byrd) | 1310-1311 |
The Bride’s goodmorrow | 288, 292, 379 |
The British Grenadiers | 221 |
Broome, the bonny, bonny broome, country dance | 390 |
Brooms for old shoes, à 4 (Ravenscroft) | 1324 |
Brown Bessy, (‘Come over the bourn’) | 185c |
Browning, or ‘The Leaves be green’ (+ Bevin, Byrd, Cobold, Inglott, Phalèse, Stonings, Woodcock) | 154d, 155c, 253, 915 |
Duchess of Brunswick’s toye (Bull) | 300a, 1483 |
Duke of Brunswick’s alman (Bull) | 320a, 439 |
Mister Bucton’s galliard (Dowland) | 871 |
Les Buffons, Buffens, see Les Bouffons | |
Bull masque (Bull, arr. Adson) | 1160 |
Il Burato, gagliarda | 845 |
Burying of the dead à 4 (attributed to Byrd) | 12, 530 |
But O – but O, — The hobby horse | 39, 145 |
But lante tante, down, a down | 176c |
But mice and rats (spoken) | 132 |
But shall I go mourn | 404 |
Buy any black (shoe polish) | 1473D |
Buy new broome, consort song (Whythorne) | 1473B |
By a bank as I lay: three man song (Ravenscroft) | 308c, 310a , 822 |
By force I am fixed | 236 |
By hills and dales (Ravenscroft) | 285, 614 |
By the moon: dance song | 191c |
By thy mouth, or black and white | 137 |
C
Calen o custare me (Calino custure me; Cailin óg a stóiron mín) | 74, 173, 370c, 403e, 608 |
The call for the company | 934 |
Can she excuse my wrongs, lute song (Dowland, Eyck); ‘Earl of Essex galliard’ lute | 353c, 879, 1089 |
Can you not hit (‘Can’st thou not hit it,’ dance tune; ‘Hit’) (‘Thou can’st not hit it’) | 146 |
The canaries (+ Praetorius ‘La Canarie’) | 609, 1342 |
Can’st thou not hit it, dance tune(‘Thou can’st not hit it’) | 146 |
Canzon in imitationem Bergamasca angl. (Scheidt) | 549 |
Captain Car (‘Captain Care’; ‘Captain Ker’; ‘The Sick tune’) | 235a |
(Captain Digorie) Piper, see under Piper… | |
La Caracossa, gagliarda | 1268, 1389 |
Care charming sleep (Johnson) | 106c, 115c, 208b, 263c, 1040 |
(My Lady) Carey’s dumpe (attrib. Aston) | 300b, 336a, 371, 754 |
Carillon de village (Vallet) | 541A |
Carman’s whistle, country dance (+ Byrd, John Johnson) | 60, 168, 403c, 610, 713 |
Lord of Carnarvon’s jegg, country dance | 979 |
Cater brawls, Caterbralls (Susato) | 325b, 567 |
Cavalilly man (John Parry) | 52a |
Cecilia almain (Ammerbach) | 428, 897 |
Cecilia pavan | 1543 |
Chairs to mend | 1473F |
My Lord Chamberlain his galliard (Dowland) | 1089 |
Chanson anglois (Barafosta’s Dream) (Vallet) | 201b |
Le chant des oiseaux (Jannequin) | 560 |
La charg conflictus | 13, 418 |
Charon, O Charon (R. Johnson) | 155F |
La chemise, see ‘ La Shymyze’ | |
Chestnut, country dance (‘Dove’s figary’), see also ‘Flatt paven (John Johnson; arr. Farnaby) | 1275 |
Chevy Chase: ballad using older tunes | 55b, 66f, 121e |
Chi passa, galliard (Azzaiolo; + Byrd, Holborne) | 255, 384, 505, 543, 842 |
Chiamata di guerra I & II | 508-9 |
Child Rowland to the dark tower came | 134 |
Childe Waters | 381 |
The Children in the wood | 50d |
Chirping of the lark (‘Muscadin,’ ‘Kempe’s morris’) | 39b, 145, 564, 1193 |
Clement Cotton pavane | 1247 |
The Clothier’s song (to Packington’s Pound) | 363b |
The Chirping of the nightingale | 563 |
The Choice, alman (Holborne) | 469 |
Chromatic pavan and galliard (‘Queen Elizabeth’s pavan and gallaird’ Bull„ Philips) | 1289-90 |
cinque-pas galliard (Sinkapace) | 888 |
City cries (Dering) | 1472 |
Clement Cotton, pavane | 1247 |
Clement’s squirrel, lute | 479 |
Lady Clifton’s spirit | 876 |
The Clothier’s song (to Packington’s Pound) | 303b |
The Cobbler (Cobbler’s hornpipe/ jig/ catch) | 176b, 933, 977 |
The codpiece that will house (spoken) | 127 |
Cold’s the wind (Cobbler’s jig) | 176b, (247f), 938 |
Come again, sweet love, lute song (Dowland) | 1090 |
Come and buy my greens | 1473G |
Come and go: possible song title | after 309 |
Come ashore, lute song (Coperario) | 1429 |
Come away, come away, death | 354, 1408 |
Come away, come sweet love (Dowland) | 1091 |
Come away, Hecate | 158b |
Come, buy my greens and flowers fine | 1473G |
Come, follow, follow me (Spanish gipsy) | 143e |
Come follow…whither shall I follow, catch à 3 (Hilton) | 306a |
Come follow me merrily my mates, canon in unison à 5 (Ravenscroft) | 143e, 620 |
Come, heavy sleep (Dowland; Johnson) | 115g-h, 1042 |
Come hither (Wigthorpe) | 203a |
Come Holy Ghost, eternal God: anthem with instrumenal consort | 10a, 487 |
Come kiss me Kate, round à 4 | 283 |
Come, live with me…beside shallow rivers (Corkine) | 57c, 180a, 271a, 308d, 915 |
Come, o come, my life’s delight (Campion) | 10c |
Come o’er the bourne, Bessy to me | 135, 276e |
Come Sirrah, Jack ho, ayre à 3 (Weelkes) | 1501 |
Come sit by the fireside | 176b |
Come sorrow, come (Morley) | 1031 |
Come, sweet love, let sorrow cease (tune) see ‘Bara Faustus dream’ (‘The shepherd’s joy’) | |
Come thou, Father of the Spring (Wilson) | 10b |
Come thou, monarch of the vine | 10h, 750 |
Come to me grief for ever, consort song (Byrd) | 1017 |
Come to me soon (refrain of ‘As at noon Dulcina rested’) | 179 |
Come tread the paths, consort song | 213 |
Come unto these yellow sands | 298, 556 |
Come ye heavy shades of night (Dowland) | 10d, 1207 |
Come ye young men (The Maypole song) (Staines morris) | 276c, 415b, 1069 |
Comedians masque, mandora | 628 |
Comedianten Tantz (Coperario) | 629, 1144 |
Il Compagna, lute | 789 |
Complain my lute (after ‘Hearts-ease’) | 281a |
A Complaint (John Dowland) | 115b, 182, 810 |
(Farnaby’s) conceit | 447, 635 |
Concolinel | 143 |
Constant Susanna (The Constancy of Susanna) There dwelt a man in Babylon | 350a |
A Coopeer am I | 1473E |
Coperaree, masque | 308e iii, 1137, 1143 |
Cophetua, see ‘The king and the beggar’ | |
Lo coranto (Byrd ‘French coranto’, arr. Morley) | 151c, 296b |
Coranto d’Espagne | 667, 1468 |
La Cornetta, pavan and saltarello | 1265-6 |
Countess of… see under next word in title | |
Country cries (Dering) | 57a, 945 |
Country dance (Bull) | 709 |
Coupé de la guerre, branle | 590 |
Courant de la bataglia (Praetorius) | 514, 677 |
Courante de la Complainte (Vallet) | 689A |
Courante de Mars (Sweelinck) | 1130 |
Courante M.M. Wüstrow (Praetorius) | 684 |
Cozier’s catches | after 351 |
Cradle of conceits, pavan (Holborne) | 1048 |
Cradle pavan (Holborne) | 1049 |
Cries of London: Tom’s a cold, poor naked Bedlam (Gibbons) | 130a |
Cross the water | 100 |
Crowned with flowers, consort song (Byrd) | 202, 655 |
The Cruelty of Guernatus (ballad set to ‘The Jew’s Dance’) | 963 |
Cuckolds all a row, ballad tune used as country dance (‘Hey boys, up we go’) | 699 |
Cuckold’s masque | 1164 |
The cuckoo, consort song (attrib. Nicholson) | 557 |
A cup of beer, round à 3 (or 4) | 64f |
A cup of wine that’s brisk and fine | 64 |
Cup us till the world go round, chorus | 10 |
Cuperaree (i.e. Coperario) (Gray’s Inn; Mad Tom) | 308e iii, 1135-7 |
A currant for Mrs. Murcott (Pilkington) | 687 |
Cushion dance (Song of the) cutpurse | 303b |
Cutting’s comfort, lute | 1057 |
The cypress curtain of the night, lute song (Campion) | 1206 |
D
La Damoiselle (La doune cela) | 716 |
Damon and Pithias (For thou dost know, O Damon) | 42 |
Dance of death (‘A Nightpiece’), country dance | 414d |
Dancing galliard (Bull) | 888 |
Danish march | 38, 737 |
Dans de Hercule oft maticine (Susato) | 106b, 566 |
Danse des buffons (Phalèse) | 106b, 566 |
Danse du berger | 1142 |
Danse du roi (Susato) | 725 |
Daphne and Corydon (words lost) (+ Farnaby ‘Tell me Daphne’ F280) | 170c |
Daphne or ‘The Shepherdess’, country dance (+ Farnaby Variations F112); as consort song, ‘When Daphne from fair Phoebus did fly’ | (170c), 191d, 200, 285, 329, 695, 1453 |
Dare you haunt | 194a |
Dargason (Sedany) (Donkin Dargason), country dance | 63e, 176c |
Daunce (‘Dulcina’) | 22d |
De la court à 5 (Parsons) | 946, 1508 |
De la tromba pavane (Alison) | 38a, 268, 1264, 1446, 1514 |
Dear, do not your fair beauty wrong (Johnson) | 1107 |
Death of a buck, hunting call | 186, 938 |
(The lamentable song of the) Death of King Lear and his three daughters | 117 |
Death rock me asleep | 56, 109c, 115f, 300e |
Delight pavane, lute (Pavane to delight) and galliard (John Johnson) | 1279-80 |
The King of Denmark’s Delight (Hume) | 738 |
The King of Denmark’s galliard (Battle galliard) (+ Dowland) | 357, 512, 538, 867 |
Deo gratias, passamezzo pavan (Philips) | 225c |
Deo gratias Anglia, see ‘Our King went forth’ | |
Departure is my chief pain (Henry VIII) | 797 |
Desperado | |
Devil’s dance, antimasque (Adson) | 161 |
Diana, see The Goddess Diana | |
Queen Dido, or ‘Troy town’ q.v. | 22f, 37 i and ii, 324, 327, 331, 334 |
Diferencias sobre la pavana italiana à 4 (Cabezón) | 142a, (1342),1466 |
(Captain) Digorie Piper’s pavane and galliard (Dowland) | 9; 8b, 877 |
Dildos and fadings | 408, 957 |
Ding, dong, bell… All into service (Ravenscroft) | 51c |
The disdainful shepherdess, see Phillida flouts me | |
Do me right and dub me knight, Samingo | 66 |
Do nothing but eat, and make good cheer | 62 |
Do you not know à 3 (Morley) | 653 |
Doctor… see next word in title | |
A doleful deadly pang (Strogers) | 1018 |
doleful dumps (When griping grief) | 282 |
Dolorosa pavan and galliard (Phalèse) | 1289-90 |
Domingo, hey trolilo (‘Hold lingel hold’) | 66f |
Donkin Dargason (‘Sedany’), country dance | 176c |
Dont vient cela, à 4 (Susato after chanson by Sermisy) | 500 |
Double, double, toil and trouble | 159 |
A Double forth and a double back, round à 4 | 283 |
The doubting virgin | 494b |
La Doune cella (La demoiselle) | 716 |
Dovehouse pavan (Ferrabosco II) | 1259 |
Dove’s figary, see inder ‘Chestnut’; see also Flatt pavan) | |
Down, (down), a-down (refrain), see also ‘a-down a down’, ‘And down a down’ and ‘Hey down a down’ | 176, 394, 614-5 |
The Downright squire, lute | 211 |
Draw on sweet night, madrigal à 6 (Wilbye) | 646 |
His Dreame (Farnaby) | 1301 |
Drewries accords, lute duet | 1066, 1490 |
Drive the cold winter away , country dance | 129, 155a |
Duchess, Duke of…see name in title | |
Dulcina ‘daunce’, country dance (‘As at noon Dulcina rested’) (+ Brade) | 22d, 201e |
Dulcina (‘Robin Goodfellow’, ‘From Oberon in Fairyland’) | 189, 354b |
E
Earl of … see name in title | |
Ecce quam bonum: galliard (Holborne) | 40a i |
Echo, 2 lutes (Pilkington, or Marchant) | 764, 1071 |
Echo pavan (attrib. Byrd) | 765-6 |
(Prince) Edward’s pavane (Pavane d’Angleterre) | 1273 |
Sir Eglamour, that valiant knight | (302c), 368, 373 |
Eight Kings’ dumb show | 161 |
Eighty-eight, ballad set to ‘Hanskin/Jog on’ | 139, (405a) |
Eliza is the Fairest Queen, consort song (Edward Johnson) | 656 |
Queen Elizabeth almain (morisco) | 1186 |
(The Most Sacred) Queen Elizabeth, her galliard (Dowland) | 626, 872, 1355, 1503 |
Queen Elizabeth pavan and galliard (‘Chromatic pavan and galliard.’ Bull) | 1295-6 |
Lady Elizabeth’s masque, lute | 1155 |
Elslein liebes, Elselein, lute song (Neusidler) | 896 |
Elves’ dance (Bennett) | 196 ii |
Emperor’s pavan (The emperorse pavyn) | 1223 |
En vrai amoure (Henry VIII) | 96 |
England be glad à 3 (attrib. Henry VIII) | 71 |
Engelske Klocke-Dans | 1184 |
English coranto | 272b, 662 |
English Fortune (Engelske Fortuyn) (Sweelinck) | 256b |
English haye | 149b |
English huntsuppe (Whitfelde) | 1, 18, 948 |
English jig | 993 |
English march | 78, 163a, 1125 |
English pavane and galliard (Gervaise) | 1273-4 |
English volta, see under Light o’ love | |
L’ennuy qui me tourmente, galliard or reprise | 425 |
Entrata Imperial (Fantini) | 108a, 250 |
Entré du luth (Ballard) | 1036 |
Er bad rhai-yn taer un galad | 52b |
L’Espagnolette à 5 (Praetorius) | 1041, 1464 |
Essex Anticke masque à 5 | 1159 |
Earl of Essex galliard (Dowland) | 353c, 879 |
Earl of Essex’s last Goodnight (‘Well-a-day), allad tune | 36a, 899 |
My Lord of Essex measure (Tintelore d’Angleterre) | 105b, 152b |
Est-ce Mars (‘The French tune’ Vallet or Guédron, Sweelinck) | 827, 1130 |
Every day I cannot come to woo, (Quoth John to Joan) | 287 |
F
Fa la sol à 3 (Cornysh) | 636 |
Fa sol la mi | 118 |
Fadings (Dildos and fadings) | 408, 767 |
Faery/ Fairy round: coranto (Holborne) | 188a, 483a, 673 |
Fain I would, but I dare not (Ferrabosco) | 1104 |
Fain I would if I could, country dance (Parthenia, or The King’s complaint’) | 700 |
Fain would I change that note (Hume) | 1110 |
Fain would I have a pretty thing (‘The lusty gallant’: dance tune) | 64d, 143a, 734 |
Faine would I wed a faire young man (Campion; Giles Farnaby, Richard Farnaby) (cf Quodling’s Delight) | 191d |
Fair Britain, Isle, consort song | 1016 |
Fair, if you expect admiring, lute song (Campion) | 1079 |
Faire weather (Mundy) | 789, 1445 |
Fairest nymph, masque (Gibbons) | 1139 |
Fairies, black and grey | 187 |
Fairies’ dance (Fairy masque) (Robert Johnson) | 194a, 195a, 199 |
Fairy dance (Fisher laddie) | 194e |
Fairy round, see under Faery round | |
Fall of the leafe (Peerson) | 1437 |
The famous Prince of Macedon (set to ‘Chi passa) | 255, 384 |
Fantasia de redobles (Fuenllana) | 796, 1469 |
Far from triumphing court (Dowland) | 914 |
Farewell, adieu, that courtly life | 198 |
Farewell, fancy (Dowland) | 780, 800 |
Farewell, galliard (Holborne) | 700 |
Farewell dear heart | 352 |
Farewell dear love (Jones) | 352, 800 |
Farewell, my joy (Cowper) | 1005 |
Farewell, too faire, lute song (Dowlnd) | 803 |
Farewell unkind! lute song (Dowland) | 169, 802 |
Farnaby’s conceit | 447, 635 |
Fathers that wear rags | 125 |
Fayne… see Fain… | |
Fear no more the heat of the sun (Greaves) | 32 |
A Feather on the Breath of God (Hildegard of Bingen) | 25 |
Fie on sinful fantasy | 188 |
The Fifteenth day of July (Brave Lord Willoughby) | 266 |
Fill the cup and let it come | 65 |
Fill the pipe once more (‘Come Sirrah, Jack ho’) ayre à 3 (Weelkes) | 1501 |
Fine knacks for ladies (Dowland) | 412b, 414b |
Fire burn and cauldron bubble | 159 |
(Ballad of a) Fish | after 412 |
Fisher laddie, see Fairy dance | |
Flatt masque (attrib. John Johnson) | 1133 |
Flat pavan and galliard (attrib. John Johnson) | 1275-6 |
Fleet Street (‘Nobody’s jig’) (attrib. Richard Farnaby) | 306b, 355b, 990 |
Flout ’em and scout ’em | 306 |
Flow my tears (Dowland), vocal version of the ‘Lachrymae pavane’ | 31a, 244b, 336e, 1024, 1256 |
Flow not so fast ye fountains, lute song(Dowland) | 1026 |
Flute and drum (attrib. Byrd) | 14, 527, 752, 1122 |
Flying fame | 55b, 75, 117, 121a, 121e, 136a |
Fools had ne’er less grace in a year | 120 |
The Fool’s masque | 386m |
For bonny sweet Robin | 48 |
For I the ballad will repeat | 1 |
For I’ll cut my green coat | 381 |
For o, for o, the hobby horse is forgot | 39 |
For the rain it raineth every day (‘When that I was a tiny little boy’) | (128), 366 |
For thou dost know, o Damon dear | 42 |
Forlorne hope, fancy (Dowland) | 779, 1022 |
Fortuna desperata (Busnois, Henry VIII) | 182 |
Fortune my foe: ballad tune (+ Byrd, Dowland, Scheidt, Vallet) | 115b, 182, 263b, 279, 303a, 322, 819, 1023 |
Le Forze d’Hercole, pavan | 591 |
A fox, when one has caught her (probable verse only) | after 124 |
A French Ayre (Gibbons) | 825 |
French brawl | 144, 568 |
French cavalry sennet (‘Boute selle’) | 1448 |
French coranto (Byrd) | 151c, 670 |
French gayliarde (galliard), lute (attrib. John Johnson) | 826, 844 |
French hunting fanfare | 323, 979 |
French jig, bass viol (Hume) | 995 |
French King’s masque | 104c, 151d |
French lavolto (Arbeau) | 1531 |
French marches | 26a, 79, 1127 |
French morris, antimasque | 1180 |
The French tune (Est-ce Mars) | 830, 1130 |
Ye French volta | 1528 |
The Friar and the nun, country dance (versions) | 4, 296a |
The Friar in the well (‘The maid peeped out at the window’) , country dance | 302c |
Frog galliard (Dowland, Wilbye; arr. Morley) | 188b, 878,1276 |
From Oberon in Fairyland | (22d), 189, 345 |
Fuggi, fuggi, fuggi da questo cielo | 1543 |
Full fathom five thy father lies (Robert Johnson) | 170d, 299, 304d |
The Funerals: pavane (Holborne) | 40a ii, 239 a i, 243, 336j, 1009 |
The Funerals: galliard (Holborne) (Noel’s galliard) | 336d, 1609 |
The Furies, masque dance | 155A |
G
Gaelic lullaby (‘Grigor Giodhal’) | 1051 |
Gagliarda Zorzi | 848 |
Gallarda Milanesa¬, diferencias (Cabezón) | 962 |
Galliard battaglia (Scheidt) | 538 |
Galliard du Comte Essex (Vallet) | 353a |
Galliard for the victory (Byrd) | 533 |
Galliarda passamezzo à 6 (Philips) | 226a, 1288 |
Galliarde angloise, Sweet Margaret (Vallet) | 245a, 415d |
Galliarde Compte d’Essex | 353c |
Galliarde d’Ecosse (Phalèse) | 1397 |
Galliarde de la guerre | 832 |
A Galliards Gigge (Byrd) | 991 |
La Gamba, pavan and galliard | 1116, 1268, 1389 |
Gardes de la marine, march | 79 |
Gathering peascods, country dance; (Alleyn’s jig; Johnson’s Toy) almaine | (15d), 16a |
Gentil Madonna (Azzaiolo. Gods of Love) (Turkeyloney) | 241a |
The ‘George Alow’ came from the South | 382 |
Get you hence for I must go (Robert Johnson) | 413 |
The Ghost, virginals (Byrd) | 1475 |
Gigge-a-Gogge (Woodycock) (+ Ward — once attrib. Farnaby) | 203b |
Passamezzo del Giorgio | 1217 |
Gipsies’ round: country dance (+ Byrd) | 701, 1388 |
The glass doth run, ballad set to ‘Wigmore’s galliard’ | 247a, 401 |
Gloria Patri (from Te Deum by Tallis) | 107b |
Go from my window (+ Alison, Byrd, Dowland, Gibbons, Morley, Mundy, Pilkington, Robinson) | 49d, 354f, 381b, 494, 606, 898 |
Go nightly cares (Dowland) | 1092 |
Go no more a-rushing (Tell me, Daphne/ Daphne and Corydon) | 170c |
Go to bed sweet muse (Jones) | 106e, 1041 |
God give you good morrow my masters (Poor naked bedlam, Tom’s a cold) (Cries of London) | 130a |
The God of love, that sits above, ‘Goddes of love’ (lute) ‘Turkeyloney’ | 241, 411a |
The goddess Diana | 120c, 325, 326 |
Goddesses, see ‘Quodlings’ delight’ | |
The Golden pavan | 1409 |
Good morrow, general | 249 |
Good morrow, sweet Hero | 235 |
Good morrow, ‘tis Saint Valentine’s day | 46 |
Good Shepherd sorrow | 333a |
Goodnight and good rest, lute | 903 |
Goodnighte (Bull) | 902 |
Gravedigger’s song | |
Gray’s Inn Antic masque | 1146 |
Gray’s Inn mask (Board lute book) | 1139 |
Gray’s Inn maske or ‘Mad Tom’ (‘Poor Tom’ country dance) | 130b, 1142 |
Gray’s Inn masque the first ‘Cuperaree’ (Coperario) | 308e iii, 1142 |
Gray’s Inn masque, the second of The Lords | 1147 |
Gray’s Inn masque (Creighton ms.) | 1148 |
Great bell of Osney, catch, ‘freeman song’ | 818 |
Green garters, (Green stockings), country dance, | 698 |
Green groweth the holly (Henry VIII) | 94, 909 |
The green man (‘Woodycock’) | 263b |
Greensleeves (+ Cobbold, John Johnson) | 36b, 57b, 178, 185, 150c, 172c, 350b, 741, 1060, 1214 |
(see also modified version as ‘Old cloak’) | |
Greenwood (The huntsman; Woods so wild) (+ Byrd; Foster; Gibbons) | 15b, 146b, 904 |
Grene growth the holy à 3 (Henry VIII) | 94, 909 |
The grief which tortures me, galliard (‘Ennuy qui me tourmente’ Arbeau) | 425 |
Mrs Nicholas Griffiths’ galliard (Dowland) | 875 |
Grigor Giodhal (‘Celtic lullaby’) | 1051 |
Grimstock, country dance (+ Praetorius) | 184, 683, 980 |
La Guerre (Janequin) | 510, 1237 |
Guerre, guerre gay, alman (Attaignant) | 350a |
Gulchardo (Guichardo), consort song | 213 |
Ein guter Welscher Tanz (Neusidler) | 894 |
Sir Guy of Warwick, ballad set to tune related to ‘O Mistress mine’ | 116 |
Gypsies round, see ‘Gipsies round’ |
H
Hackney à 5 (‘Woodycock’) | 639 |
Halfe Hannikin (Hanskin), country dance | 405b |
Hamburg march | 38b |
The Hanging tune, see ‘Fortune my foe’ | |
Hanskin (‘Jog on’) (+ Richard Farnaby) | 405a, 414e |
Hard by a crystal fountain, madrigal à 6 (Morley) | 648 |
Hark, all ye lovely saints above (Weelkes) | 917 |
Hark, hark, the lark (Johnson/ Wilson) | 30, 554 |
(King) Harry the VIII pavan | 95, 1225 |
Harry’s galliard | 1370 |
Haute Barrois, branle de | 94b |
Have I caught my heavenly jewel | 119, 127, 181 |
Have more than thou showest, incantation | after 118 |
Have you seen the white lily grow (atrib. Robert Johnson) | 1109 |
The Haye; branle de la Haye | 23a, 149d, 179a, 407b |
Haymakers’ ballad | 297 |
Haymakers’ masque | 313d, 711 |
He cannot come every day to woo (refrain in ‘Quoth John to Joan’) | 285 |
He that has a little tiny wit, cf also ‘When that I was and a little…’ | 128 |
He that keeps not crust nor crumb | 122 |
He that will an alehouse keep, catch (Ravenscroft) | 749 |
Heart’s ease, ballad tune (in duple time) | 143c, 155a, 230a, 281a, 354a, 360, 403d, 1075 (+ Holborne: alman ‘Honeysuckle’) |
Heart’s ease, country dance tune/ lute almain (in triple time) | 2b, 281b, 295c, 333d |
Heaven and Earth, ballad tune | 1273 |
Heavily, heavily (lost tune) | 244a |
The hedge-sparrow fed the cuckoo | 123 |
Heigh-ho for a husband | 227a |
Heigh-ho holiday, coranto à 5 (Holborne) | 675 |
Der heilig Berg (Brade) | 912 |
Hélas Madame (Ghizenheim, attrib. Henry VIII) | 1004 |
Hem, boys, hem, round à 3 | 10g, 59 |
Henry VIII pavan (Harry VIII pavan) | 95, 1225 |
Heres Paternus: pavane (Holborne) | 1244 |
Hexentanz (Brade) | 160a |
Hey boys, up we go, country dance (Cuckols all a row) | 699A |
Hey, down a down, refrain in catches à 3 and à 4 (Ravenscroft) | (348), 612-4, 622, 631 |
Hey, down a down (‘The Cobbler’) | 176b |
Hey, ho nobody at home (Ravenscroft) | 620A |
Hey, ho to the greenwood, catch à 3 (Melvill, Ravenscroft) | 908 |
Hey jolly Robin, lute song (Jones) | 48b |
Hey non nony: refrains of ‘It was a lover’ and ‘Sigh no more’ | 20, 231 |
Hey nonny nonny (related to refrain in Walsingham, q.v.) | |
Hey Robin, gentle Robin, round à 3 (Cornysh) | 362a |
Hey Robin, jolly Robin | 362 |
Hey, trola there boys there (Piers) | 940 |
Heynen sein Tantz (Coperario/ Brade) | 1145 |
His dream, His humour; His rest (Farnaby) see Composer index | |
The history of Diana and Acteon | 325b, 336b |
Hit and miss, country dance | 191d |
Hit and take it, alman (Johnson) | 454 |
Hit, ‘Cans’t thou not hit’ (‘Thou can’st not hit it’), lute | 146a |
Hobby horse [is forgot], morris (‘For O, for O, the Hobby horse’) | 39a, 398, 408 |
Hoboecken Brawl (Susato) | 568 |
Mr Giles Hoby’s galliard (Dowland) | 874 |
Hoftanz, lute (Neusiedler) | 805 |
Hold, Lingel, hold, consort song | 66g |
Hold thy peace, thou knave, catch à 3 (Land, Ravenscroft) | 346, 819 |
Hollis berrie (+ Brade ‘Der heilig Berg’, broken consort à 5) | 912 |
Honiesuckle, consort version à 5 of Heart’s ease (Holborne) (q.v.) | 245c, 281a, 471 |
Honour, riches, marriage-blessing | 331 |
A hornepype (+Aston) | 928, 930 |
Hornepype d’Angleterre, guiterne | 932 |
Horse to ride, and weapon to wear (spoken) | after 132 |
Horse’s brand (Branle des chevaux) | 601 |
How can the tree but waste’, consort song (attrib. Barley) | 216 |
How should I your true love know, see under ‘Walsingham’ for settings | 44 |
How wretched is the state, lute song (Johnson) | 1032, 1076 |
Hoyda, hoyda, Jolly Rutterkyn à 3 (Cornysh) | 177, 815 |
Hugh Aston’s masque (+ Byrd ‘Hugh Aston’s round’) | 742 |
Humming bachelor | 101, 386f |
His Humour (Farnaby) | 147, 1526 |
My Lady Hunsdon’s puffe, alman (Dowland) | 465 |
Hunt’s up, tune sung to ballads (+ Bennet, Whitfelde) | 1, 18, 197, 276f, 302a, 363c, 948 |
Hunt’s up, catch à 3 (Bennett) | 302a, 949 |
The Huntsman, see ‘Greenwood’ | |
Hupf auff, lute (Neusiedler) | 893, 964 |
Hymn for a widower (East) | 244a |
I
I am a jolly foster à 3 | 15c, 905 |
I am gone sir | 363 |
I am the Duke of Norfolk, see ‘Paul’s steeple’ | |
I called my love…Sing willow | 251a |
I cannot come every day to woo | (70), 287 |
I cannot eat but little meat | (141), 247e, 999 |
I care not for these ladies, lute song (Campion) | 1111 |
I have a house and land in Kent (Ravenscroft) | 287 |
I have been a foster (Cooper) | 15c, 811, 906 |
I loathe that I did love: folk setting (In youth when I did love) | 50b, 217c |
I often for my Jenny strove | 997 |
I rose early (Rinn Mi Mocheirigh), Scotch dance | 1415 |
I saw a noble queen (Byrd) | 1014 |
I saw my lady weep, lute song (Dowland) | 1027 |
I serve a worthy lady, Scotch jig | 1393 |
I shall no more to the sea | 303 |
I smile to see how you devise, galliard | 864 |
I’d just as soon be a beggar as a king | 998 |
If all the ages of the earth (Ferrabosco) | 10e |
If care do cause men cry | 41b, 658 |
If it do come to pass (3rd verse of ‘Under the greenwood tree’) | 15 |
If love now reigned, SAT voices (Henry VIII) | 91 |
If music be the food of love | 336A |
If my complaints (Captain Digory Piper’s Galliard) (Dowland; + arr. Corkine) | 8 |
If she be made of white and red | 140 |
If there be anyone, lute song (Bartlet) | 15a |
If wishes would prevail | 72 |
Il estoit une filette, pavan (Moderne) | 1381 |
Image of melancholy, pavane (Holborne) | 239 ii a, 1182 |
In a merry May morn, consort song (Nicholson) | 1178, 1441 |
In angel’s weed, consort song (Byrd) | 1014 |
In Crete, lute song melody | 81, 88, 211, 311c, 412c |
In darkness let me dwell, lute song (Dowland) | 1025 |
In honour, riches | 311 |
In pescod time: ballad tune (+ Holborne) | 55a, 204d |
In pride of May (Weelkes) | 1177 |
In sad and ashy weeds: ballad tune | 354d |
In Sherwood lived bold Robin Hood (Jones) | 48b |
In youth when I did love | 50 |
Intrada anglicana (Souch, his masque) | 225a |
Intrada der jungen Princessinnen (Brade) | 286k |
Irish dance | 955 |
Irish dumpe | 755 |
Irish ho-hoane | 951 |
Irish jig | 409, 957 |
Irish lady, (Aniseed water Robin), country dance | 952 |
Irish march (‘Battle’, attrib. Byrd) | 525, 958 |
Irish toy (Bull) | 954 |
Irish trot, country dance | 953 |
Irish washerwoman, jig | 176c |
Irlender Tantz (Brade; R. Johnson The Second of the Temple) | 313g ii, 955 |
It befell at Martinmas (‘Captain Car’) | 255a |
It fell upon a summer’s day, lute song (Campion) | 1081, 1429 |
It is to me a great right joy (Henry VIII) | 98 |
It was a lover and his lass (Morley) | 20 |
It was a time when silly bees (Dowland) | 1093 |
It was the friar of orders gray | 297 |
Italian rant, country dance | 1543 |
J
Jack boy, ho! Boy, catch (Ravenscroft) | 270, 294a |
Jack Pudding (Step stately), country dance | 706, 1192 |
Jam lucis orto sidere (Tallia) | 1353 |
Jenkin the jester, catch à 5 | 622, 631 |
Jenny plucked pears, country dance | 697 |
Jephthah, judge of Israel (‘O Jephthah’) | 36, 350b |
Jester’s song | 630 |
La jeune fillette (Bacheler) | 745 |
The Jew’s dance (Nicholson) | 166, 963, 1432 |
Jiggy, joggy: lute piece | 1052 |
Joan, come kiss me now (Ravenscroft), see ‘John, come kiss me now’ | |
Joan quoth John, Scotch tune ( + Nicholson, attrib.) | 657, 1413 |
Joan to the maypole, lute (Maypole dance/ Coperario The Morris/ Farnaby The King’s morisco) | 353a, 1198 |
Joan’s placket | 1412 |
Jog on, jog on the footpath way, cittern song | 64e, 120e, 139, 405a |
Jog on, country dance (‘Halfe Hannikin’) | 405b |
Jog on, catch à 3 (Hilton) | 405c |
John Carelesse, Ballad of, tune | 120b |
John, come kiss me now, dance (+ Byrd, Ortiz, Ravenscroft) | 106b, 566, 722, 735, 747 |
John Dory, tune | 247e |
John Perrichon’s coranto | 688 |
John, quoth Joan (Nicholson) | 657 |
John Sanderson: cushion dance | 247c, 719 |
Johnson’s… see Composer index | |
Le joli bois, reprise (after chanson by Clemens non Papa) | 911 |
Jolly driver | 304b |
Jolly Pinder (‘Robin Hood and the Pinder of Wakefield’) | 68d |
Jolly Robin (‘Bonny sweet Robin’) | 48 |
The Jolly shepherd (Ravenscroft) | 136b |
The Jolly shepherd, masque dance (another tune) | 386j |
Jon, see John | |
Un jour vis un foulon (Lassus) | 66b |
Jouyssance vous donneray, basse danse (after Sermisy) | 499 |
Joyne hands, court dance (after canzonet à 3 by Morley ‘See mine own sweet jewel’) | 724, 925 |
Der Juden Tanz (Neusiedler) | 166d, 964 |
Jump her and thump her | 409b |
K
Kapaskie (Chi passa) | 384 |
Katherine of Aragon’s song | 100 |
The keeper did a-shooting go | 176d |
Kemp’s jig, country dance | 966 |
Kemp’s jig, (Kempe’s Gigge), lute piece; consort | 70a, 143f, 298c, 355a, 965 |
‘The third part of Kemp’s jig’see ‘Rowland’ | |
Kemp’s morris (‘Muscadin’; ‘Chirping of the lark’. + Farnaby, Sweelinck) | 39b, 145, 564, 1193 |
Kettledrum, country dance | 995A |
Kilt thy coat, Maggie, lute | 1414 |
Kinborough Good, pavane (Byrd) | 1316 |
The King and the beggar, ballad (King Cophetua and the beggar maid) | 67d, 141, 145, 267, 275, 320b, 996-8 |
The King of…see the next word of the title | |
King Solomon, alman tune | 142b, 276b, 350a |
King Stephen was a worthy peer | 248 |
The King’s complaint (Fain I would if I could) | 700 |
The King’s Hunt (Farnaby) | 415e, 941, 983 |
The King’s Hunting jig (Bull) | 415e |
King’s hunt is up, see Hunt’s up | |
The King’s masque (The French King’s masque) | 104c, 151d |
The King’s mistress, masque | 1140 |
The King’s morisco (‘The Maypole) | 340, 353a, 1167, 1185 |
The King’s pavan à 3 (Pavane Les Quercade; Kyng Harry VIII pavyn) | 95, 1225 |
Kiss me Kate, refrain to round à 4, Come kiss me Kate | 283 |
The knell of Johnson (Robert Johnson) | 540, 1033 |
Knocks go and come | 77 |
The Kyng’s pavyon (Pavane Les Quercade) | 95, 1225 |
Kypascie (‘Qui passe’ Byrd) | 384 |
L
La.. see under next word of title | |
La, la, la, je ne l’ose dire, chanson (Certon) | 571 |
Labandalashot (Bandalashot), galliard | 47a ii, 176e, 841 |
Labour in vain,(‘Shepherds’ holiday’), folk dance | 1455 |
Lachrimae (Dowland + Byrd, Farnaby, Holborne, Morley, Schop) | |
xxyyxx31a, 109a, 138b, 172b, 246b, 300c, (954), 1024, 1251 | |
Ladies’ masque no 1 (L’Estrange) | 103 |
Lady…see under surname in the title, Lady Greensleeves, see ‘Greensleeves’ | |
Lady, if you so spite me, lute song (Dowland) | 1093 |
Lady, Lady, Lady, see‘There dwelt a man in Babylon, Lady, Lady,’ see also line in ‘Was not good King Solomon’ | |
Lady, lye near mee, counttry dance | 698 |
(Lady) Laiton’s almain, ‘measures’ (Dowland) | 466 |
Lamentation (East) | 244a |
Lamentation of Hecuba (‘Was this fair face’) | 2 |
Lamentation of Shore’s wife | 271b |
Lancashire hornpipe | 926 |
Sir John Langton’s pavan (Dowland) | 1252 |
The lark that tirra-lirra sings | 393A, 594A |
Lasso mia vita, consort song (Dowland) | 1182 |
Last will and testament: pavan (Holborne) | 29d, 61a, 1257 |
Late as I waked out of sleep, catch à 3 | 121d |
Sir Launcelot du Lake | 55c |
Laveche (La vecchio) pavane; and ‘Galliard after Laveche’ | 1064-5, 1277-8 |
Lavena, country dance tune | 704 |
Lavolto (Morley) | 313e, 366c |
Lawn as white as driven snow (attrib. Johnson?, attrib. Wilson?) | 412 |
(Lady) Layton, see Laiton | |
Le.. see under next word of title | |
Leather bottle (‘Leather bottel’), drinking song | 304a |
Leave, lightie love, ladies | 236b |
The Leaves be green see ‘Browning’ | |
Lesquercade pavan (‘Les Quercade’) | 95, 1225 |
Let not Cloris think (Danyel) | 16b |
Let the back and the sides go bare my boys | 247c, 999 |
Leveche, see Laveche | |
Life is but a walking shadow | 155B |
Light o’ love (‘Lightie love ladies’) (+ Praetorius) | 236, 332a, 342, 364, 369, 400, 682, 1067, 1345, 1539 |
Lightening (John Munday) | 789, 1443 |
Lillibulero | 59b |
A Little of one with t’other, see Stingo | |
Little Peg of Ramsey (Cobbold) | 347 |
Loath… see Loth | |
The London cry, Tom’s a-cold | 130 |
The London prentice, to the tune of ‘Nancie’ | 221, 436 |
The Long grounds (see also Chi passa, Goodnight, Hunts-up, Rogero, Tinternell) | (903), 1478 |
Long have mine eyes gazed with delight (Campion) | 344 |
Long live fair Oriana, see ‘Hard by a crystal fountain’ (Morley) | 648 |
The Long pavan | 1226 |
Lord…see under surname in the title | |
Lord Thomas and fair Elinor (A Soldier’s life) | 46, 49b |
Lords masque (Grays Inn masque) | 1147 |
Loth to depart (+ Dowland, Farnaby, Ravenscroft) | 24, 28b, 134, 167b, 258, 805 |
Love, let us kiss: galliard (Arbeau) | 152 |
Love, love, nothing but love | 333 |
Love will find out the way (‘Over the mountains’) | 1055 |
The lovely lamentation of a lawyer’s daughter | 297 |
The lovely Northern lass | 390 |
Lover’s complaint | 251a |
Lull thee beyond me, country dance | 697A |
Lulla, lullaby my sweet little baby (Byrd) | 1043 |
Lullabie (Holborne) | 201a, 1047 |
Lullabie (set to Luther’s Old 112th) | 32a |
My Lord of Lumley’s pavan (Bull) | 1297 |
My Lord of Lumley’s galliard (Bull) | 491, 1298 |
Lustie gallant (tune) (‘Fain would I have a pretty thing’:ballad) | |
64d, 143a, 230d, 242, 295b, 304c, 382c, 404d, 734 |
M
The mad merry pranks of Robin Goodfellow | 22s, 194d, 345 |
Mad Tom (Gray’s Inn masque) 130b, 404A, 539, 1142 | |
(La) Magdalena, basse danse and tourdion | 26c, 503 |
Der Magister Dantz (Ammerbach) | 428, 897 |
The Maid peeped out at the window (‘The Friar in the well’), country dance | 302c |
Maid will you marrie? | 430 |
The Maiden’s song ( + Byrd) | 494 |
The Maids in constrite, lute | 1054 |
Male content, consort à 4 (Simpson) | 640, 1039 |
Mall Sims, version of ‘Wanton season’ (+ Bachiler, Farnaby, Sweelinck) | 77, 332d |
Malt’s come down (Ravenscroft, Byrd) | 10h, 750 |
La Mantovana (Zanetti) | 1543 |
March before the battle (attrib. Byrd) | 219b, 520, 1118 |
March of foot, March of the footmen (attrib. Byrd) | 552, 1119 |
March of the horsemen (attrib. Byrd) | 523, 1120 |
March to the fight (attrib. Byrd) | 528, 1123, 1504 |
My Lord of Marche pavan (Lauder) | 354g, 1409 |
Queen Marie’s dumpe (Romanesca variations, attrib. Aston), lute | 281c, 740, 759 |
La marinière (Vallet) | 1431A |
Martin sayd to his man, catch (‘freeman song’) à 3 | 821 |
Marygold, galliard (Holborne) | 219a |
Mascharada der Edel Frawen (Brade = Coperario ‘Nymphs’ dance’) | 313f |
Mascharada der Pfaltzgraffen I-III (Brade = Robert Johnson ‘The Princes’ I-III) | 452-3, 727-9 |
Masque of … see under name following | |
Master Piper’s pavan, see Piper | |
The master, the swabber, the boatswain and I | 304 |
Mattachins, sword dance (Arbeau) | 106b, 566 |
Mault, see Malt | |
La Maurisque (Susato, Arbeau) | 1186 |
May you never more enjoy the light | 389 |
Mayden’s song, see Maiden’s song + Farnaby ‘The King’s morisco’) | |
The Maypole dance (‘The Morris’; + Coperario; | 353a, 378, 1167, 1186 |
Maypole dance at Gray’s Inn | 1168 |
The Maypole song (‘Come ye young men’ based on Staines morris, q.v.) | 276c |
Me, me and none but me, lute song (Dowlnd) | 1029 |
The Measure (Lodge lute book, pavan) | 225d, 265 |
Melancholy, galliard, lute (Dowland) | 239b, 873 |
Melancholy, pavane ‘Image of melancholy’ (Holborne) | 239a ii |
Melodious birds sing madrigals | 180 |
Meridien, alman (Farnaby) | 448 |
Merry Andrew (‘Jack Pudding’), country dance | 1192 |
The merry bachelor | 385c |
The merry clerk, masque dance | 386a |
(Two) merry lasses, galliard | 317, 386h-i |
Merry, merry milkmaids: country dance tune (‘Milkmaid’s dump’) | 47b, 49a, 793 |
The merry miller’s wooing | 45 |
A merry mood, lute duet | 1068 |
The merry old man, masque dance | 386e |
The merry old woman, masque dance | 386g |
This merry pleasant spring, consort song | 558, 1439 |
The merry pranks of Robin Goodfellow (Dulcina, later tune) | 189 |
The merry young man, masque dance | 386b |
Le Mésur, lute (The black almain) | 430 |
Michill’s galliard (set by Morley) | 26b, 850 |
Midnight, lute | 209 |
Mignarde galliard (Mr. Henry Noel’s galliard) | 880d |
Duke of Milan’s dump | 757 |
Mr Mildmay’s galliard | 357 |
Militis dump | 756 |
Milkmaid’s dump (Merry, merry milkmaids), country dance | 47b, 49e, 754 |
Milkmayd’s bobb, country dance | 702 |
Mill, mill O | 135C |
Duke of Millan’s dump | 757 |
Mille regrets (Josquin des Près), consort song (and as Pavane: Susato, Byrd variations) | 510, 1238, 1359 |
Millfield, country dance | 10f, 154c, 201d |
Millison’s jegge (jig) | 367, 978 |
Mister, Mistress, see under surname in the title | |
Mit ganczem Willen (Pumann) | 892 |
Der Mohrentanz (Brade) see Blackamoor’s dance | |
Der Mohrentanz (Susato), see Mourisque | |
Mon désir. Rone à 4 (Susato) | 703 |
Monsieur’s alman (+ Batchelar, Byrd, Morley, Holborne) | 5, 206, 256a ii, 442 |
Monsieur Mingo | 66d |
Moors’ dance, see Morris dance | |
A Morisco (+ Mell) | 1186 |
Morisco galliard, cittern | 1188 |
A morisque, country dance (Playford) | 1187 |
The morris (Byrd) | 531, 1195 |
The morris, Maypole dance, lute | 353a, 386, 1167, 1185 |
The morris dance at Gray’s Inn | 1168 See also under Staines morris |
Morris dance (Brade) | 151f, 565, 1190 |
Mother Watkins ale, see ‘Watkins ale’ | |
Mounsieur, see Monsieur | |
Mountebanks masque | 1168 |
La Mouresque (Praetorius, Vallet) | 1196 |
La Mourisque, or Mohrentanz (Susato) | 1186 |
Move now with measur’d sound, masque song (Campion) | 172a |
Mum, mum, He that keeps | 122 |
Mundesse, country dance | 703 |
Muscadin (‘Chirping of the lark’; ‘Kemp’s morris’ Farnaby) | 39b, 564, 1193 |
Muselborowe Field (lost tune) | 351 |
Music divine à 6 (Tomkins) | 645 |
Muy Linda (Holborne) | 853 |
My bonny lass she smileth (Morley) | 1174 |
My dame hath in her hatch at home | 306c |
My grief (Bull) | 985, 1011 |
My heart is full of woe | 281 |
My heart is leaned on the land | 236c, 370d |
My juell (Bull) | 2a |
My Lady …see under surname in the title | |
My Linda, see Muy Linda | |
My little sweet darling (‘Cradle song’), lullaby, consort song (originally attrib. Byrd) | 644, 1044 |
My Lord …see under surname in the title | |
My Lord Chamberlain, his galliard | 1069 |
My love she mourneth (Cornysh) | 1001 |
My love that vowed, lute song (Campion) | 1082 |
My mind to me a kingdom is, set to ‘In Crete’ | 87 |
My mistress had a little dog (Byrd) | 374, 483 |
My Robin is the Greenwood gone | 48, 120d, 191cv v |
My thoughts are winged with hope, lute song (Sir John Souch’s galliard) (Dowland) | 692, 869 |
(Dr. Bull’s) Myself, jig | 881, 1095 |
N
Die Nachtigall, masque dance à 5 (Brade) | 563A |
Näglein Blumen, masque dance (Bateman) | 1166A |
Nancie (Sir Edward Noel’s Delight) (Demantius, Haussmann, Morley) | 221, 436 |
Nay, by Saint Jamy | 299 |
Ne reminisceris (Wilbye) | 489 |
Never weather beaten sail, madrigal à 4 (Campion) | 642, 1083 |
The New almain (Meridien almain. Farnaby) | 448 |
The New bergamask (Bull) | 545 |
New cockles à 3 (Ravenscroft) | 1473A |
The New Exchange (version of ‘Go from my window’) as country dance | 354f |
New Fashions, quodlibet, voice and viols see Composer index under Cobbold | |
The New hunt is up, 2 lutes (John Johnson) | 1, 18, 948 |
The New medley, lute | 296c |
New oysters à 3 (Ravenscroft, Weelkes) | 1473B |
The New Sa-hoo (Farnaby) | 1129 |
A new Tom o’Bedlam | 130b |
New years gift à 5 (Holborne) | 245d |
Mrs. Nichols alman (Dowland) | 404 |
Niederländischer Rundtanz, lute (Judenkünig) | 762, 1385 |
Niederländischer Tanzlein (Neusidler) | 763 |
The Night piece (‘Shaking of the sheets’ second tune), country dance | (57a), 414d |
The Night watch (Holborne) | 233, 238, 293, 470, 732 |
The Nightingale | 563A-B |
The Nine worthies | after 148 |
No grief is like to mine, consort song (Parsons) | 827 |
No more dams I’ll make for fish | 305 |
No more thou thundermaster, recitation | 33-34 |
Noble, famous Queen, consort song (Byrd) | 1015 |
The Noble man, masque tune (Johnson) | 1141 |
The Noble shirve | 404a |
Nobodies jigg (‘My Lady Winwood’s Maggot’; ‘Fleet Street’ attrib. Richard Farnaby) | 306b, 355b, 990, 1199 |
Nobody at home, catch à 3 | 620A |
Noel’s delight, see ‘Nowell’s delight’ | 205 |
Noel’s galliard (‘Funerals galliard’) (Holborne) | 336d, 1009 |
Mr Henry Noel…see under Nowell (Dowland) | |
Non nobis, Domine, canon à 3 (attrib. Byrd) | 76 i a, 624 |
Nonesuch, country dance (minor version of À la mode de France) | 140, 217b i |
The Northern lass’s lamentation | 193, 411 b |
Northumbrian dance tune, 4 recorders | 398 |
Now each flow’ry bank of May, madrigal à 5 (Gibbons) | 1176 |
Now hath Flora robb’d her bow’rs (Campion) | 1084 |
Now is the month of maying (Morley) | 1173, 1175 |
Now, oh now I needs must part (‘Frog galliard’ Dowland) | 188b, 298a, 879, 1028, 1089 |
Now Robin, lend to me thy bow: canon à 4 | 68e, 215d |
Now the hungry lion | 216 |
Now until the break of day | 217 |
(Sir Edward) Nowell’s delight (‘Noel’s delight’; ‘All you that love good fellows’; and as ‘Nancie’ almain (Morley, Haussmann) | 221 |
Mr Henry Nowell his galliard (Dowland); see also under Noel (‘Funerals galliard’ Holborne) | 880 |
Nut brown maid | 381a |
Nutmegs and ginger, country dance | 70a, 73, 298c, 707 |
Nuts be brown (Leaves be green) (Browning) | 154d |
Nymphs dance (Coperario) | 313f |
O
O blessed God in Trinity | 84 |
O Death, rock me asleep 6, 56a, 109c, 115f, 164, 209d, 246, 542, 1037 | |
O fair, o sweet | 392 |
O god of love! | 232, 241 |
O Jephthah. Judge of Israel | 36 |
O King Stephano | 248, 314 |
O let us howl (R. Johnson) | 155E |
O Lord maker of all thing (Mundy) | 107a |
O lusty May (Melvill) | 1179, 1442 |
O man in desperation | 350c |
O mistress mine, where are you roaming (+ Morley, Byrd) | 106d, 336f, 344 |
O nachbar Roland, canon à 5 (Scheidt), see ‘(Lord) Willoughby’s welcome home’ | |
O sweet Oliver, see ‘Hunt’s up’ | 18, 276f, 280, 375 |
O’ the twelfth day of December | 351 |
O what a plague is Love (Phillida) | 196a |
O Willow, willow. (Willow song; The poor soul sat sighing) | 251 |
O ye happy dames | 305b, 370d |
O ye tender babes (Tallis) | 1352 |
The Oak and the ash, see Northern lass’s lamentation | |
Oaken leaves, country dance | 702A |
Of all the birds that ever I see, catch à 3 (Bartlett, Ravenscroft) | 154b, 363a, 555 |
Of all the jolly pastimes fellows do use, catch à 2 | 482 |
Oft have I ridden upon my gray nag (‘Dargason’ | |
Ravenscroft) | 176c |
Of have I vowed à 5 (Wilye) | 645 |
Oh see under O | |
Oil of barley, see Stingo | |
Old Almaine (‘King of Africa’, Holborne; Byrd ‘Queens Almaine’) | 67d, 141, 275, 320b, 446 |
The Old cloak (‘King Stephen was a worthy peer’) | 247b, 248 |
An old hare hoar | 276 |
The Old Hundredth (Day’s Psalter) | 107e |
The old man | 1394 |
The Old Measures, see The Old Almain, Quadran pavan, The Queen’s Almain, Turkeyloney | |
Old Spagnioletta (Farnaby) | 1341, 1464 |
Old Tom o’ Bedlam | 139b |
On the twelfth day (‘O’ the twelfth day’) | 351 |
Onder der Lindengröne (Sweelinck, Vallet) | 15d |
The one he said he was an owl (‘Therre was | |
three fools’) | 383 |
Orientis partibus, 12th century conductus | 305 |
Orlando sleepeth, lute arrangement of ballad | |
(Dowland) | 1056 |
Countess of Ormonde’s galliarde | 236a |
Orpheus with his lute made trees (Bartlett) | 106a, 115d |
Ould almaine, see Old almaine | |
Our King went forth to Normandy | 70b |
Our Father (Alison) | 107d, 490 |
Ousel cock, so black of hue, see ‘Woodycock’ | 203b, 550 |
Over the broome, Bessy | 135b, 1486 |
Over the mountains, lute | 1055 |
(Ye) owld man, Scottish jig | 1394 |
(Earl of) Oxford’s maske/march (My Lord of Oxenford’s masque) (Byrd) | 219b, 520, 1547 |
Oyster pie | 297 |
P
Packington’s Pound (‘Sir John Pagginton’; ‘The Jigge’ lute; + Cutting; as ‘Courante’ Praetorius; Song of a cutpurse) | 135e, 160b, 154e, 188e, 303b, 680 |
Paduana hispanica, variations (Scheit) | 142a |
Pagget pavane and galliard (Philips) | 1285-6 |
Palamon, fair Palamon; Palamon was a tall young man | 388 |
Pandolpho (‘Pour down, you pow’rs divine’ Parsons or Strogers) | 807 |
Pangs of love, ballad (tune used ‘Was not good King Solomon’) | 276b |
Les Pantalons (Vallet) | 549 |
Parade des Bouffons (Susato) | 106b |
Paradiso: pavane (Holborne) | 133a, 1202, 1474 |
Pardon, goddess of the night | 244 |
The Parlement (Kempe’s jig) | 70a, 966 |
The Parson’s farewell, country dance (+ Praetorius) | 712, 1347 |
Parthenia (‘Fain I would if I could’, or ‘The Ling’s complaint’) | 700 |
Pascy measure | 1215 |
Pass e medio (Susato) | 1217a |
Passameze pour les cornetz (Praetorius) | 1128, 1234, 1360 |
Passamezzo d’Angleterre (Phalèse) | 1220 |
Passamezzo (antico) pavan à 6 (Deo gratias) (Philips) | 225c |
Passamezzo del Giorgio | 1217 |
Passingmeasures pavan and galliard (Bull, Byrd) | 273b, 1312-3 |
Passymeasures, My Lady Greensleeves, see under ‘Greeneleeves’ | |
Pastime with good company (Henry VIII) | 92, (94) |
La Pastorella (Regensburg ms.) | 1457 |
Patient Grissel | 288, 292, 379 |
Patientia à 5 (Holborne)(Cabezn) | 1203 |
Paul’s Steeple, country dance | 1404 |
Paul’s wharfe (Farnaby; Brade as ‘Scottish dance’) | 1399 |
Pavan of Albart, consort à 7 (Alberti) | 424, 1240 |
Pavan sans per (Cutting) | 1235 |
Pavana and gagliarda doloroso | 1289-90 |
Pavana Bray (Byrd) | 1310 |
Pavana hispanica, see Spanish pavane | |
Pavana in passa e mezzo | 1219A |
Pavana italiana, diferencias (Cabezón) | 142a |
Pavana La battaglia à 6 (Hesse) | 511, 538 |
Pavana Lachrymae (Sweelinck) | 31a |
Pavana Pagget and galliara (Philips) | 1285-6 |
Pavana passa y mezzo (Susato), see Pass e medio | |
Pavana Philippi, keyboard variations (Sweelinck) | 1291 |
Pavana ploravit (Holborne after Dowland) | (31a), 109a, 1024. 1256 |
Pavane and galliard to Delight (John Johnson) | 1279-80 |
Pavane d’Angleterre et sa galliarde (‘Prince Edward’s pavane’ Gervaise) | 1273-4 |
Pavane d’Anvers (‘Turkeyloney’) | 242a |
Pavane de la bataile (Susato) | 505, 510, 1237 |
Pavane de la guerre (Gervaise) | 510, 1237 |
Pavane de Spaigne (Pavanigia) see Spanish pavane | |
Pavane in passo e mezzo | 1230 |
Pavane lesquercade (‘Les Quercarde’, The Kyngs pawvyon) | 95, 1225 |
Pavane of Albart, see Pavin of Albart | |
Pavane sans per (Cutting) | 1235 |
Pavaniglia (Caroso) | 142a |
Pavin of Albart, consort à 7 (Alberti) | 424, 1240 |
Pawky Adam Glen | 155D |
Pawles wharf, see Paul’s wharfe | 1399 |
Peace ho! I bar confusion | 26 |
The Peaceful Western Wynde (Campion) | 172a |
Peg-a-Ramsey (Pegaramsey) (+ Bull) | 126b, 347 |
Peggie Bell, antimasque | 755 |
Countess of Pembroke’s …Funerals (‘Noel’s galliard’ Holborne) | 40a ii, 243, 336j, 1009 |
Countess of Pembroke’s Paradise (pavane Paradiso’) (Holborne) | 138a, 1202, 1474 |
Pepper’s black, country dance tune | 120b, 694 |
John Perrichon’s coranto (Robert Dowland) | 688 |
Pescod Time (In pescod time) | 18, 55a, 276a |
Philida flouts me | 196a |
Philida was a fair young maid | 196 a, b |
Phylli, dump | 758 |
A pickaxe and a spade | 50 |
Picking of sticks | 704A |
Le pied de cheval, allemande | 601 |
Pieds en l’air | 28b ii |
Pillicock sat on Pillicock hill | after 130 |
(Captain Digorie) Piper’s pavan and galliard (Dowland) | 8; 9a, 877 |
A Plainesong, 2 lutes (Robinson) | 1075, 1326 |
Playfellow: a jig (Robinson) | 968 |
Playfellow II (‘Wanton’), coranto (Holborne) | 323c, 672 |
Please one and please all | 359 |
The King of Poland, country dance | 38c |
Polish dances (Demantius, Haussmann) | 1327-40 |
Poor naked Bedlam, Tom’s a-cold (Poor Tom) | 130a, 133 |
The poor soul sat sighing (Willow song) | 251 |
Poor Tom a’ Bedlam | 130, 539 |
Poor Tom, country dance (Graies Inn maske) | 93b, 130, 539, 1142 |
A Port (Dall) | 1392 |
Posthuma pavane (Holborne) | 417a |
Pour down, you pow’rs divine, consort song Parsons, or Strogers) | 807 |
Pourquoi, ronde à 4 (Susato) | 1378 |
Pretty Bessie (The Blind Beggar) | 404b |
Prim Rosen (Brade) | 1164 |
Prima chiamata di guerra | 507 |
The Primerose (Peerson) | 1436 |
Prince… see under name | |
Prince’s currant (Johnson) (‘The Prince his corranto’) à 5 | 693, 728 |
Allemande du Prince (‘Si je m’en vois.’ Phalèse) | 424 |
The Princes almayne (Robert Johnson; Brade ‘Näglein Blumen’) | 450, 453, 1154 |
The Prince’s galliard (Bull) | 860 |
The Prince’s jegg (The Skipping jigge) | 976 |
The Prince’s masque dances 1-3 (Robert Johnson) | 452, 727, 1153; 453, 1154; 1155 |
Put up thy dagger, Jemy (Farnaby) | 341, 723 |
Pyramus and Thisby, A new sonnet | 212 |
Q
Quadling, see Quodling | |
Quadran pavane (attrib. Cotton) | 1367 |
Quadron pavan and galliard, lute (+ Alison, Bull) | 272a, 273a, 1293-4, 1360-2 |
Quarter braules (Susato) | 325b, 336b, 567 |
Queen… see under name | |
Queen of, see under the name of country | |
The Queen’s alman (Byrd, Holborne), based on ‘The Old Almain’ (q.v.) | 320b, 446 |
The Queen’s command (Gibbons) | 634 |
The Queen’s coranto, mandora | 639 |
Queen’s Goodnight, 2 lutes (Robinson) | 109d, 900, 1073 |
Queen’s jig (+ Playford, Robinson) | 972-5 |
Queen’s Majesty’s new hunt is up, see Hunt’s up | |
The Queen’s masque, The Masque of Queens | 10e, 156a, 160a, 286 l |
The first of the Queen’s masques, (Robert | |
Dowland) | 156a |
Queen’s treble, dump, 2 lutes (John Johnson) | 761, 1062 |
Les Quercade, pavan | 95, 1225 |
Qui passa (Byrd) after ‘Chi passa per questa strada’ (Azzaiolo) | 384 |
Quodling’s delight, (later called ‘Goddesses’), country dance (+ Farnaby) | 16d, 193, 377, 384, 411b, 696 |
Quoth John to Joan (Scotch tune) | 9b, 287, 1413 |
R
The rain it raineth every day (‘When that I was and a little tiny boy’) | 366 |
Raleigh’s galliard (Cutting) | 885 |
A Re masque | 290 |
Reapers’ dance | 312g i |
Regina galliard (Bull) | 861 |
La Represa, consorts à 7 | 637-8 |
Rerum Creator omnium | 107a |
Resolution, pvan (Dowland) | 1255 |
La Response (Le devil yssu) pavane (Alison) | 1241 |
His Rest, galliard (Farnaby) | 856, 1302 |
Rest sweet nymph (Pilkington) | 1046, 1112 |
The retreat (attrib. Byrd) | 529, 1368 |
Rex gloriose Martyrum | 107c |
The rich jew (Nicholson) | 166c, 174, 215f, 963 |
Lady Riche, coranto | 668 |
The Right Honourable…see under family name | |
Rinn Mi Mocheirigh (‘I rose early’) | 1413 |
A Robin à 3 (Cornysh) | 362 |
Robin (‘Bonny sweet Robin’ + Askue, Dowland, Farnaby, Holborne, Mundy, Robinson) | 48a, 120d, 192, 391 |
Robin Goodfellow (‘Dulcina’, later tune, ‘From Oberon in Fairyland’) | 189, 201f, 244e |
See also under ‘As at noon Dulcina rested’ for an earlier tune called ‘Dulcina’ | |
Robin Hoode, lute (1559) | 348b, 1372 |
Robin Hood and Little John, catch (+ Cobbold) | 348b |
Robin Hood and the monk (‘Greenwood’) | 15b |
Robin Hood and the Pinder of Wakefield (‘Jolly Pinder’) | 68c |
Robin Hood, ballad tune (for ‘Three merry men be we’. Ravenscroft) | 347b |
Robin Hood is to the greenwood gone (‘Bonny sweet Robin’) | 48a, 120d, 192, 391 |
Robin Hood, Robin Hood, said to Little John (Ravenscroft) | 347b, 623 |
(And) Robin Hood, Scarlet and John | 68 |
Robin Hoode (Askue) | 48a |
Robin Hood’s dance, lute | 1373 |
Robin Hood, said little John come dance before the Queen | 347b |
Robin Hood was a tall young man | 142c, 388 |
Robin is to the Greenwood gone, lute | 48a, 391 |
Robin, lend to me thy bow | 54d, 215d |
for titles and first lines not beginning with the name ‘Robin’ see | |
A Robyn, gentle Robin, round à 3 (Cornysh) | [2362, 812] |
And Robin Hood, Scarlet and John | [68] |
Bonny Sweet Robin, cittern (Holborne) | [48a] |
For Bonny Sweet Robin is all may joy | [48a] |
Hey Jolly Robin (Jones) | [48b] |
Hey Robin, see ‘A Robyn’ | |
Hey Robin, Jolly Robin | [48b, 120d, 362] |
In Sherwood I wed stout Robin Hood (Jones) ‘a lively dance number’ (PC132) | [48b] |
Jolly Robin (‘Robin is to the Greenwood gone’) | [48b] |
My Robin is to the Greenwood gone, lute | [48a] |
Now Robin, lend to me my bow, see above ‘Robin, lend to me thy bow’ | |
Sing after fellows (top line of ‘Robin Hood and Little John’ see above) | [348b, 623] |
Sweet Robin, gentle Robin | 46a |
Robinson’s May, lute | 1050 |
La rocha el fuso, galliarda | 837 |
Rogero, lute (Aria di Ruggiero) | 120c, 203c, 416 |
Roland (Rowland) see ‘(Lord) Willoughby’s welcome home’ | |
Romanesca, air de danse, lute | 215e |
La Roque, basse danse (Attaignant) | 501 |
La Roque al fuso (Susato) | 837 |
Rorie Dall: Scotch piece (A Port), Celtic harp | 1392 |
Rosasolis, jig (Farnaby) | 989 |
Rose is white and rose is red, country dance | 705 |
Rosen im Frühlinge (Brade) | 1164 |
Roses, their sharp spines being gone, wedding song | 379 |
La Rosette à 4 (Praetoriuss) | 679 |
Le Rossignol, 2 lutes | 562, 1067 |
Le Rossignol, à 5 | 562A |
La Rote de rode, pavane (Attaignant) | 1134, 1356 |
Rothschencken Tantz (Farnaby; arr Brade) | 308e iii, 1137, 1143 |
Round about in a fairy ring à 4 | 196 ii |
Round battle, galliard, lute (Dowland) | 968 |
Row well ye mariners: jig or round dance tune | |
(+ Robinson) | 403b, 982,1053, 1426 |
Rowland (Roland), see ‘(Lord) Willoughby’s welcome home’ | |
Rown in rhodio mynwent eglys | 52a |
Royal flourish à 5 | 111, 809 |
Rufty Tufty, morris dance | 1194 |
Ruggiero, see Rogero |
S
The Sacred end pavane (Morley) and gallaird (Baxter) | 1304-5 |
Sailor’s dance (‘Jew’s dance’) | 1432 |
Sailor’s masque | 1428 |
Saint Thomas’ wake, pavan and galliard (Bull) | 223b, 272d; 274b |
The Earl of Salisbury pavan and galliard (Byrd) | 1307-8 |
The Lord of Salisbury his pavane and galliard (Gibbons) | 336b i-ii, 1299-130 |
The Earl of Salisbury’s favourite (Hume) | 1477 |
Saltarelle (La Gamba, La Caracossa) | 1116, 1268,1389 |
*saltarello (Susato) | 849, 1384, 1390 |
Samingo (‘Do me right…’) | 66 |
La Sampogna (Morley) | 1456 |
Una sañosa porfia à 4 (Encina) | 1035, 1461 |
Sans roche, bergerette and reprise (Susato) | 1450-1 |
La Sarabande (Praetorius); La Sarabande espagnole (Vallet) | 1050, 1344, 1467 |
Satyr’s dance (as ‘Satyr’s masque’ Robert Johnson) | 11, 415a, 1150 |
(3 mal) Satyrn Tantz (Brade) | 415a, 1167, 1185 |
Say love if ever thou didst find, lute song (Dowland) | 1096 |
Scarlet and John | 68, 175 |
Schotsen dans (Thysius) | 963 |
Ein schottische Tantz à 5 (Brade) | 1399 |
Schwarzknap | 197 |
Scotch brawls | 604-5, 1401 |
Scotch cap, country dance | 1407 |
Scotche gaylarde, lute | 157, 839, 1396 |
Scotch jig (+ Farnaby ‘Gigge’) | 223a, 986, 1398 |
Scotch tune for ‘Quoth John to Joan’ | 287c, 1413 |
Scotis jig ‘Ye ould man’ | 1394 |
(Queen of) Scots galliard for the cittern | 866 |
The Scots march (Rogers virginal book) attrib. Mulliner | 1416 |
Scots rant | 1414A |
Scottish dance (Brade) | 1399 |
Scottish Hunt’s up | 950 |
Scottish jig(g) | 223a, 986, 1398, 1403 |
The Secke with two winds | 937 |
Sedany (‘Donkin Dargason’), country dance | 176c |
Sedet sola (Holborne) | 1258 |
Seeds of love (‘Sprig of thyme’) | 208c |
Sellenger’s round (‘The Beginning of the world’) dance (+ Byrd, John Johnson) | 143c, 188d, 194b, 201, 217b ii, 230e, 414a, 1063, 1386 |
Semper Dowland, semper dolens (Dowland) | 1021, 1253 |
Shaking of the sheets, country dance; for another tune , see under ‘Night piece’ | 405a, 414d |
Shaking of the sheets, lute tune | 57a |
Shall frown or angry eye (Corkine) | 22c |
Shall I come sweet Iove (Campion) | 241b |
Shall I go walk the woods so wild (Greenwood: Playford title: The Woods so wild: dance) | 15b |
Shall I strive with words to prove (Dowland) | 880 |
Shall I sue, shall I seek fo grace, lute song (Dowland) | 1097 |
She whose matchless beauty (Jones) | 370b |
Sheepsaring song | 406 |
The Shepherdess (Daphne), country dance | 191d, 695, 1453 |
Shepherds and shepherdesses, dance of | 407 |
Shepherd’s dance, see Sans roche (Susato) | |
Shepherd’s holiday (Labour in vain), country dance | 1455 |
Shepherd’s joy, ballad, see Barafaustus dream | |
Shepherd’s masque | 104a, 407a, 1449 |
Shoemaker’s wife, toy (Dowland) | 1485 |
(The lamentation of) Shore’s wife | (18), 271 |
Short mesure of My Lady Wynkfylds Rownde | 1377 |
Show of Eight Kings | 161 |
Shows and nightly revels (Lupo) | 1165 |
Shropshire rounds, hornpipe | 927 |
Shrovetide wassail | 62-68 |
La shy myze, country dance | 717 |
Si j’aime ou non, galliard (Arbeau) | 835 |
Si je m’en vois (Attaignant) | 425 |
Si pas souffrie, pavan | 1239 |
Si pour t’aymer, gaillarde (Phalèse) | 838 |
Sick, sick, in grave would I were (to ballad ‘It befell at Martinmass’) ‘The sick tune’ (Captain Car) (+ Holborne) | 235a |
Lady Frances Sidney’s Goodnight (Alison) | 901 |
Lady Sidney’s almain (Alison) | 475 |
Sigh no more, ladies (attrib. Ford, Jones) | 230 |
The Sighs: galliard (Holborne) | 234 |
The silver swan, madrigal (Gibbons) | 650 |
Simple cavalcot cantus pomposus | 54, 105a, 1502 |
Since first I saw your face (Ford) | 1105 |
Since Robin Hood, Maid Marion (incorporating ‘Watkin’s ale’ tune +Weelkes) | 39a, 399, 1172, 1197 |
Sing after fellows…Robin Hood said little John, catch à 4 | 347b, 623 |
Sing care away (to tune of Heart’s ease) | 143c, 281a |
Sing we and chant it, à 5 (Morley) | 143d |
Sing willow | 241 |
Sing with thy mouth…Loath to depart, round à 4 | 24a, 28a, 167a |
Sinkapace (cinque-pace) galliard | 888 |
Sir… see under family name | |
Sleep wayward thoughts (Dowland) | 208a, 1098 |
Sleepest or wakest thou jolly shepherd | 136 |
Small paths to the greenwood | 910 |
(Sir John) Smith, his almaine (Dowland) | 469 |
Soet Oliver (Sweet Oliver) | 18 |
Soet Robbert (Vallet) see ‘(Lord) Willoughby’s welcome home’ | 203a |
A soldier’s life (Who list to lead a soldier’s life) (+ attrib. Byrd as ‘Soldier’s dance) | 27, 46, 48c, 247d, 256b, 532 |
see also under ‘Where is the life that late I led’, ‘A soldier’s life’ with a different melody | |
The soldiers’ summons (attrib. Byrd) | 521, 1505 |
King Solomon | 350a |
Some men for sudden joy do weep | 121f |
The Song called trumpets, consort à 6 (Parsons) | 647, 947, 1509 |
Song of King Edgar | 47a ii |
The Song of the cutpurse, see Packington’s Pound | |
Sorrow come, lend true repentant tears (Dowland; arranged Wigthorpe) | 1030 |
Sorrow stay, lute song (Dowland) | 1030 |
(Lord) Souch his galliard (Sir John Souch, galliard à 5) (Dowland) | 225a, 880, 1095 |
(Lord) Souches masque/ march (‘Zouch his march’ + Farnaby) | 225a, 326, 1227, 1358 |
La Spagna, basse danse (+ Josquin des Près, Ghiselin, Torre, Festa, Ortiz, Cabezón) | 506 |
Spagnoleta à 4 (Praetorius; ‘Old Spagnioleta’ Farnaby; Zanetti) | 1164-5, 1341 |
The Spanish gipsy (Come follow, follow me), country dance | 143e, 1470 |
The Spanish pavane, lute (+Bull, Caroso, Cabezón, Ferrabosco, Holborne, Mudarra, Pilkington, Praetorius, Robinson) | 142a, 263a, 318b ii, 320c, 1070, 1342, 1466 |
The Sprig of thyme | 208c |
Spring (‘When daisies pied’) | 154 |
The Sprite’s tune, consort à 5 | 1475 |
Squire’s masque (Campion, attrib. Robert Johnson) | 308a |
Squirrel’s toy (Cutting) | 480, 1487 |
The Standing masque | 1139 |
Stanes morris (‘Maypole song’ ‘Come ye young men’), country dance | 57d, 276c, 415b, 1169 |
Step stately, to the tune of ‘Jack Pudding’, country dance | 706, 1192 |
Stephen Thomas almans I and II (Bateman) | 102 |
Still through the hawthorn blows the wind | 131 |
Stingo, or ‘Oil of barley’, country dance | 196b, 227b |
The strake to the fielde | 935 |
Lord Strang’s almain (Robert Johnson) | 455 |
Lord Strang’s march, lute (Dowland) | 219b, 1118 |
Strawberry leaves, jig | 981 |
Strike it up tabor, canzonet à 3 (Weelkes) | 1170 |
Susanna galliard, lute (Dowland; on popular chanson of Lassus ‘Susanne un jour’) | 870 |
Ballad of Constant Susanna | 350a |
(The Earl of) Sussex delight, masque (Hume) | 1138 |
Sweep, chimney, sweep | 1473C |
Sweet England’s prize is gone! | 36a, 899 |
Sweet Margaret (cushion dance) | 245a, 415d, 720 |
Sweet music (Hume) | 1477 |
Sweet Oliver (O, sweet Oliver) | 18 |
Sweet pretty Jinny…Whoop | 410 |
Sweet Robin, see Bonny sweet Robin | |
S’withold (Swithin) footed thrice the wold, incantation | 192 |
Sylvia’s serenade (Who is Sylvia?) | 372 |
T
Tak you cloak about ye (Old Cloak) | 247b, 248 |
Take, o take those lips away (John Wilson?) | 165 |
Tapster, drinker à 3 | 748 |
Tarantelle (Tinternell) | 1478 |
Tarlton’s jig, lute (Dowland) | 965 |
Tarlton’s risserectione [sic], jig, lute (Dowland) | 1020 |
Taundernaken (Alamire, Henry VIII) | 96 |
Te deum à 4 from Dorian service (Tallis) | 76b |
Te deum à 5 (Byrd) | 76a ii |
Te Deum ‘O Blessed God in Trinity’ (with burden ‘Te Deum laudamus’) | 76 |
Te Deum: Gloria Patri (Tallis) | 107b |
Tell me, Daphne what is love (Farnaby ) | 170c |
Tell me John (Ravenscroft) | 28 |
Tell me dearest what is love | 170b |
Tell me where is fancie bred (‘Riddle song’) | 170 |
The Tempest,2 coyuntry dances | 297A-B |
Tempest, fantasia, virginals (John Mundy) | 789, 1443 |
Tempest masque dances | 308a, 313a |
Temple Anticke masques I-II | 1161-2 |
Temple masque dances I-III (attrib. Robert Johnson) | 313g i-iii, 1156-8 |
The Temporiser, masque dance à 4 (Robert Johnson) | 458 |
That lord that counsell’d thee | 119 |
That sir which serves and seeks for gain | 126 |
The… see under word following | |
Then death rock me asleep, see Death rock me asleep | |
Then music with her silver sound, see ‘When griping grief’ | |
Then there is mirth in heaven (Holborne) | 21b |
Then they for sudden joy: round à 3 | 121 |
There dwelt a man in Babylon | 180d, 350 |
There is a garden in her face, lute song (Campian) | 1085 |
There was a friar of orders gray | 3 |
There was a maid this other day | (196b), 227b |
There was a rat catcher | 277 |
There was an old fellow at Waltham Cross (Hilton) | 58 |
There were three fools, see The one he said he was an owl | |
There were three ravens, catch à 3 (Ravenscroft) | 615 |
There you must cut my green coat, see ‘For there you must cut my green coat’ | |
They bore him barefaced on the bier | 47 |
This merry pleasant spring, consort song | 558, 1439 |
Thou canst not hit it (‘Can’st you not hit it’) | 146 |
Thou knave, see Hold thy peace | |
Though Amarillis dance in green, à 5 (Byrd) | 651 |
Though it may seem rude (Jog on), ballad | (406) |
Though Philomena lost her love, à 3 (Morley) | 652 |
Three blind mice à 3 (Ravenscroft) | 611 |
Three merry men be we’ catch (hey, down adown) | 343, 348, 356 |
The three ravens, see ‘There were three ravens’ | |
Thou’ it may seem rude (Jog on), ballad | 405a |
Through the house give glimmering light | after 216 |
Thumping galliard (Bull) | 862, 887 |
Thunder, fantasia (John Mundy) | 787, 1443 |
Tilly-fally (‘Tilly-vally’; ‘King Solomon’) | 350 |
Time stands still (Dowland) | 1099 |
Time that leads the fatal round (Lupo) | 1166 |
Tintelore d’Angleterre (Earl of Essex measure) | 105b |
Tinternell (Tarantella), dance | 1478 |
Titus Andronicus’ complaint ballad (sung to ‘John Dory’ tune) | 115b, 182, 322 |
To delight pavane and galliard (Edward or John Johnson) | 1279-280 |
To shallow rivers: 2nd stanza of ‘Come live with me’ | 180 |
To shorten winter’s sadness à 5 (Weelkes) | 643, 918 |
To the stump, alman (Robert Johnson) | 457 |
Tom a Bedlam (‘Tom of Bedlam’; ‘Tom’s a-cold’,lute) | (118), 130, 130e, 132, 277 |
Tom Tinker, country dance | 359, 366b |
Tomorrow is Saint Valentine’s day | 46 |
Tomorrow the fox will come to town (‘Trenchmore’, Ravenscroft) | 823, 944, 1498 |
Tom’s a-cold: London cry | 130a; 132 |
Tordiglione (Caroso), see also Tourdion, Turkeyloney | 191c, 1478 |
Toss the pot | 247g |
Tourdion„ galliard | 1479 |
Tower Hill, gigge (jig) (Farnaby) | 109e, 987, 1300 |
Trader’s melodt | 1473A |
La traditore my fa morire, galliard | 372, 833 |
Tread Juno’s steps who list | 331b |
Trenchmore, as a dance, ‘hay’ | 823, 944, 1498-1501 |
Trip and go, morris dance | 148, 188c, 208d, 733, (1183), 1191 |
Triste España sinventura | 1036, 1462 |
Triumph now with joy and mirth (Giles) | 21c, 22e 311a |
Troilus, see ‘When Troilus dwelt in Babylon’ | |
Troll, troll, troll the bowl | 247f |
Trolly lolly loly lo, catch à 3 ‘freeman song’ (Cornysh) | 816 |
Trowmpettus, keyboard | 1507 |
Troy Town, (‘Queen Dido’), lute song | 22f, 37 i, 331, 334 |
The Trumpet pavan and galliard (Bull) | 1511-2 |
The trumpets, march (attrib. Byrd) | 524, 1121, 1506 |
‘The song called Trumpetts’ consort Parsons) | 647, 947, 1509 |
Turkeyloney, dance tune (Pavan danvers; Pavane d’Anvers) | 241a, 505 |
Türkische Intrada (Brade) | 22d |
The Turtle dove, lute | 308e iii |
Twelfth day of December, see’ Oh, the twelfth day of December’ | |
Twenty ninth of May | 247e, 999 |
Twenty ways upon the bells (Robinson) | 547, 1074 |
Two maids wooing a man, ballad tune | 413 |
Two merry lasses, parts I and II | 317, 386h, i |
U
Una sañosa porfia (Encina) | 1035 |
Uncoupling of the Couerte tide | 936 |
Under the greenwood tree | 15 |
(Sir Henry) Unton’s funeral (Dowland) | 1010 |
Up and down, round à 3 | 204 |
Up, tails all, country dance (+ Farnaby ‘A Toye’) | 215g, 276a, 494, 548 |
Up then Melopomene | 244d |
Upon a summer’s day, country dance | 701, 1388 |
Urchin’s dance | 191b, 194c, 217a |
Urns and odours bring away (‘The dirge’) | 377 |
Ut, re, mi, (fa sol, la) (Bull, Byrd, Ravenscroft, Robinson, Sweelinck) | 618-9, 1515-26 |
V
Vater unser | 32a |
Vaulting galliard (Bull) | 888 |
La Vecchia pavan and galliard (John Johnson, Philips) | 1064-5 |
Veil, love, mine eyes (Campion) | 344 |
Venetian galliard, cittern (Churchyard) | 865, 960 |
Veni Creator Spiritus | 10a |
Venite and Te Deum (Tallis) | 76 ii b |
La Venissienne, pavan à 4 (Gervaise) | 961, 1236 |
Venus lamentation for Adonis (Cobbold) | 1019 |
Versa est luctum (Lobo) | 1034, 1463 |
Vive le Roy! (Josquin des Pres) | 625 |
The Voice of the earth, lute | 1475 |
The Voice of the ghost, cittern (Holborne) | 1475 |
La Volta (Morley) | 313e, 335, 1533 |
La Volta Lady Morley (Byrd) | 1532 |
Volte de France (Arbeau, Thysius) | 1528 |
Volte de tambour (Praetorius) | 1447, 1536 |
La Volunté, basse danse (Gervaise) | 502 |
The Voyce, see ‘The Voice of the ghost’ (Holborne) |
W
Wales hornipe, lute | 931, 1548 |
Walsingham, (+ Bull, Byrd, Corkine, Cutting, Dowland, Holborne, J Johnson) | 44, 47a, 180b, 274, 494, 869, 1277, 1540 |
The wandering Prince | 37 ii, 324 |
Wanton: galliard, Playfellow II (Holborne) | 332c, 672 |
Wanton season (‘Mall Sims’) | 332d |
Sir Guy of Warwick, ballad | 110, 177 |
Was ever man to trust in love | 354c |
Was not good King Solomon ravished | 142b, 276b, 353a |
Was this fair face the cause, quoth she | 2 |
Watkin’s ale (+ à 6: Demantius); see also ‘Since Robin Hood’ | 63d |
We be soldiers three (Freeman’s song à 3), | 413b, 820 |
We be three poor mariners’ (Freeman’s song à 3) | 23c, 1427 |
Wedding is great Juno’s crown | 22 |
Weep you no more sad fountains (Dowland) | |
used for Lucius’ song | 115a |
Welcome, black night (Dowland) | 22a, 1208 |
Well-a-day, lute; see also Essex’s last Goodnight which uses the tune | 36a, 254, 278, 899 |
Welscher Tanz (Neusiedler) | 894 |
Welsh almaine (+ Holborne) | 51a |
Welsh dance (Bull) | 51b |
Welsh song | 52 |
0Were every thought an eye (Dowland) | 1101 |
Westron wynde | 31b, 32d |
What do you lack…pins, points | 1472 |
What if a day, or a month, or a year, lute (attrib. Dowland); lute song (attrib. Campion) | 495, 1086 |
What if I never speed (Dowland) | 1102 |
What is a day, what is a year (Rosseter) | 1113 |
What is beauty but a breath (Greaves) | 244cd |
What is the life that late I led (‘A Soldier’s life’), see ‘Who list to lead a soldier’s life’ | |
What say you Scarlet and John | 68c, 175 |
What shall he hath that kill’d the deer? (‘Forester’s song’) | 19, 907 |
What then is love?, lute song (Rosseter) | 1114 |
When Arthur first in court began | 55 |
When as we sat in Pabylon | 180c |
When as I view your comely grace, see‘Greensleeves’ | |
When Cressid went from Troy | 327 |
When Cynthia with her borrowed light | 393 |
When daffodils begin to peer | 403, 1434 |
When daisies pied and violets blue | 154, 552, 1433 |
When Daphne from fair Phoebus did fly; see ‘ Daphne from Fair Phoebus did fly’ | |
When did we sit in Babylon | 40c |
When flying fame, see Flying fame | |
When from my love (Bartlett) | 641 |
When griping grief the heart doth wound (Edwards) | 32e, 269a, 282, 300d, 354e |
When icicles hang on the wall | 129, 155, 1435 |
When Laura smiles (Rosseter) | 1115 |
When May is in his prime (attrib. Edwards) | 1440 |
When priests are more in word than matter | after 128 |
When Samson was a tall young man | 142a, 388 |
When that I was and a little tiny boy | 366, 1283 |
When Troilus dwelt in Troy town | 242 |
When we did sit in Babylon (Whenas I sat in Babylon) | 180c |
Whenas, see When as… | |
Where griping grief, see When griping grief | |
Where is the life that late I led (‘A Soldier’s life’), | 295 see also ‘Who list to lead a soldier’s life’ |
Where the bee sucks (R. Johnson; Wilson?) | 316 |
While Phoebus used to dwell (Byrd) | 1015 |
While you do here snoring lie | 302a, |
Whilom I was and a little tiny boy | 366b |
Whirligig, country dance (to the tune ‘Woodicock’) | 203b |
Whittingham Fair | 150a, 154a, 155d |
Mrs White’s nothing, jig (Dowland) | 994 |
Mrs White’s thing (Dowland) | 468 |
Mr. George Whitehead, his almain; his galliard (Dowland) | 463; 730 |
Who doth ambition shun: 2nd stanza of ‘Under the greenwood tree’ | 15 |
Who has his fancy please (Wilhelmus van Nassau) | 170a |
Who ever thinks or hopes of love (Dowland) | 1103 |
Who is Sylvia? | 370 |
Who list to lead a soldier’s life (‘A Soldier’s life’) | 27, 46, 48c, 69, 247d, 250b |
Whoop, do me no harm, good man’ (Sumarte) | 124, 204e, 410 |
Whoop jug! I love thee | 124 |
Why aske you? (+ Farnaby) | 1003, 1187 |
Why let the stricken deer live weep | 41 |
Widow’s mite (attrib. Bachiler) | 676 |
Wigmore’s galliard, lute | 80, 125b, 247a, 351c, 843 |
The wild morris | 1183 |
Wilhelmus van Nassouwe | 170a |
Will ye go walke the woode so wilde (Charles Jackson) (‘Greenwood’) | 15b, 913 |
Will you buy a fine dog (Morley) | 409b, 484 |
Will you buy any tape | 414 |
Williams his love, antimasque dance (Adson) | 1163 |
Willie, prithee go to bed, ‘Trenchmore’ | 1498 |
Lord Willoughby’s welcome home (‘Rowland’, ‘Roland’, Soet Robbert’ (+ Byrd, Cutting, Dowland, Haussmann, Vallet, Wigthorpe) | 17, 203a, 266, 365, 383, 1072, 1373 |
Willow willow (Willow song ‘The Poor soul sat sighing’) | 251, 387 |
Wilson’s wilde (‘Quoth John to Joan’; + Byrd, as ‘Wolsey’s wilde’, Praetorius ‘Courante’) | 9b, 215a, 681 |
Wilt thou unkind thus reave me? lute song (Dowland) | 804 |
The wind and the rain (‘When that I was’) | 128a, 366 |
Wind away (song snatch ‘O Sweet Oliver’ resumed) | 18 |
Winter (‘When icicles hang by the wall’) | 155 |
Mr. Winter’s jump, coranto (Dowland, Praetorius) | 685, 1348 |
My Lady Winwood’s maggot | 355b, 694 |
The witch, see The Wyche | |
Witches dance no 1, antimasque (attrib. Robert Johnson) | 160, 1131, 1458 |
Witches dance no 2, antimasque (attrib. Robert | |
Johnson) | 162, 1132, 1151, 1459 |
With a fading (Dildos and fadings) | 409, 957 |
With a hay, trolly, looly, refrain | 1498 |
With a hie dildo dill | 409 |
Without discord and both accord (Henry VIII) | 91 |
Witty wanton, dance (Robert Johnson) | 459 |
Woe betide thy weary body | 1395 |
Wohlriechende Viole (The Queen’s masque’, Brade) | 386 l |
Wolsey’s wilde (Byrd), see Wilson’s wilde | |
Wooddicock, see Woodycock | |
The woods so wild (+ Byrd; Gibbons; Playford as ‘Greenwood’) | 15b, 495, 913 |
Woodycock (‘The Woosel cock’) (+ Farnaby as ‘Gigge-a-gogge; originally attrib. Ward) | 203b |
Wooing song of the yeomen of Kent’s sonne | 287 |
Worcester brawls (Tomkins) | 603 |
Worthies, masque of the | 153 |
The wretched wandering Prince of Troy, see ‘The wandering Prince | |
Short mesure off My Lady Wynkfylds Rownde | 1377 |
The Wyche | 160c |
X
Y
Ye fairest nymph, masque dance (Gibbons) | 1139 |
Ye French Volta, see French volta | |
Ye mortal wights (Cobbold) | 1019 |
Ye old hunt is up, lute, see ‘Hunt’s up’ | |
Ye ould man, Scotch jig, lute | 1394 |
Ye sacred muses, consort song (Byrd) | 1013 |
Ye spotted snakes, see You spotted snakes | |
Ye woeful wights, consort song (Cobbold) | 1019 |
Yeoman of Kent’s wooing song | 285 |
Yet was Solomon so tempted | 142 |
Yf, see If | |
Yield unto God (Psalm 150. Cosyn) | 488 |
Yonder comes a courteous knight’, ‘freeman song’ à 4 (‘The baffled knight’) | 66e, 824, 1204 |
You dames that climb the Mount of Helicon (to the tune of ‘The Downright squire’) | 212 |
You must sing down-a-down (‘Down-a down’) | 47 |
You spotted snakes with double tongue | 201, 205 |
You that choose not by the view | after 170 |
Young hunting à 3 | 947A |
Z
Zorzi, galliard (saltarello) | 848 |
(Lord) Zouch, see Souch | 804 |