DOWLAND, JOHN BIOGRAPHY(1563 - 1626)
John Dowland, of English or possibly Irish origin, was born in
1563, probably in London. He was a lutenist of distinction but
failed, allegedly because he was a Catholic, to win a position
in the royal service, seeking his fortune abroad at Kassel and
later, in 1598, at the court of Christian IV of Denmark. He was
forced by debt to return to England in 1606 and eventually won
appointment as one of the King's Lutes in 1612.
He performed during the funeral ceremonies of King James I and
himself died the following year. Dowland was the composer, in
particular, of one of the best known songs of the period, Flow
my teares, music much imitated, epitomising the fashionable humour
of the day, melancholy. Dowland himself provided an apt pun on
his own name - Dowland, semper dolens (Dowland, always grieving)
- although he had a reputation as a cheerful man, yet professionally
embittered by his long failure to find employment at court.
Vocal Music
Dowland was above all the composer of lute-songs, publishing his first collection of airs in 1597, followed by a second in 1600 and a third in 1603. He left over eighty secular songs and these include Come again: sweet love doth now endite, Fine knacks for ladies and Flow my teares, among many others of moving intensity.
Lute Music
For the lute itself Dowland wrote Fantasias, and dance-movements, including Pavanes, Galliards, Almains and Jigs. Other Instrumental Music The best known of Dowland's instrumental compositions is his famous Lachrimae or Seaven Teares, for five viols and lute. This work includes a series of dance-movements, chiefly Galliards, and solemn Pavanes, using the theme familiar from the lute-song Flow my teares.
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