ThomasPreston died c. 1563 was an English organist and composer who held posts at Magdalen College, Oxford , Trinity College, Cambridge , and St George s Chapel at Windsor Castle . Further reading Ian Payne, Instrumental Music at Trinity College, Cambridge, c. 1594 c.1615 Archival and Biographical Evidence, Music and Letters 68 1987 , pp.  128 140. http ml.oxfordjournals.org cgi content citation 68 2 128 External links http www.hoasm.org IVM Preston.html Brief biography at Here of a Sunday Morning Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Preston, Thomas ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Preston, Thomas Category Composers for pipe organ Category People of the Tudor period Category English composers Category English organists Category Year of death unknown UK composer stub it ThomasPreston ... more details
ThomasPreston may refer to ThomasPreston of Gretton , MP for Northampton UK Parliament constituency ThomasPreston, in 1437 MP for Newcastle under Lyme UK Parliament constituency ThomasPrestoncomposer d. c. 1563 , English composerThomasPreston writer 1537 1598 , master of Trinity Hall, Cambridge and possible author of King Cambyses ThomasPreston monk , Benedictine monk 1563 1640 General ThomasPreston, 1st Viscount Tara 1585 1655 who fought on the side of Confederation in the Irish Confederate Wars 1642 1649 ThomasPreston of Holker, elder 1600 1679 , English MP for Lancashire UK Parliament constituency Lancashire ThomasPreston of Holker, younger 1647 1697 , English MP for Lancaster UK Parliament constituency Lancaster Captain ThomasPreston British Army officer involved in the Boston Massacre in 1770 Thomas Austin Preston, Jr. born 1928 , poker player also known as Amarillo Slim ThomasPreston scientist 1860 1900 , Irish scientist Thomas Scott Preston 1824 1891 Roman Catholic Vicar General of New York Thomas J. Preston, Jr. 1862 1955 professor of archeology at Princeton University hndis Preston, Thomas de ThomasPreston Begriffskl rung es ThomasPreston ... more details
VI of England Edward VI , and ThomasPrestoncomposer a choirmaster at Windsor . A gentleman waiter ...Infobox writer for more information see Template Infobox writer doc name ThomasPreston image caption ... influenced signature ThomasPreston 1537 &ndash 1598 was an English people English master of Trinity Hall, Cambridge , and possibly a dramatist. Life Preston was born at Simpson, Milton Keynes Simpson ... and M.A. in 1561. ref Venn id PRSN553T name Preston, Thomas ref When Elizabeth I of England Queen ... Ju tice appointed, Doon in uch order as foloweth. By ThomasPreston. There are two undated editions ... ThomasPreston. M. Channing Linthicum lists some of these possibilities blockquote Those who dislike to think of Cambyses as even a puerile attempt of the Latin scholar ThomasPreston, may entertain ... Letters & Papers of Henry VIII of England Henry VIII , I, ii, entry 2656 6 a ThomasPreston was rewarded ... le messuage called le White Beare was said in 1548, to have been lately in tenure of ThomasPreston ... Quod ThomasPreston . ref name chambers 469 A third ballad by Preston, not now extant, A geliflower ... DNB wstitle Preston, Thomas 1537 1598 first Sidney last Lee authorlink Sidney Lee volume 46 page 314 ... 1975 A critical edition of ThomasPreston s Cambises . Salzburg. Institut f r Englische Sprache und ... Persondata . NAME Preston, Thomas ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 1537 PLACE ... , England DEFAULTSORT Preston, Thomas Category 1537 births Category 1598 deaths Category ... century academics no ThomasPreston .... 5. ref and by disputing in philosophy with Thomas Cartwright Puritan Thomas Cartwright in the royal ... as Vice Chancellor vice chancellor of the university in 1589 90. Preston died on 1 June 1598, and was buried ... length effigy of him in the habit of a Cambridge doctor of laws. Works Cambyses Image Preston ... of roles among actors. Preston was a pioneer of the English drama, and published in 1569 A lamentable ... more details
Thomas Jex Preston, Jr. October 26, 1862 in Hastings on Hudson, New York December 25, 1955 in South Orange, New Jersey was a professor of archeology at Princeton University . He was also President pro tem of Wells College in Aurora, Cayuga County, New York Aurora, New York . On February 10, 1913, he married Frances Folsom Cleveland , the widow of President Grover Cleveland in Princeton, New Jersey . ref http www.firstladies.org biographies firstladies.aspx?biography 23 First Ladies Biographical Information Bot generated title ref References New York Times , Mrs. Cleveland and Prof. Preston Wed , February 11, 1913. New York Times , Dr. TJ. Preston W Jr. Educator, Was 93 , December 26, 1955. Notes reflist Published works Preston, Thomas Jex, The bronze doors of Monte Cassino and of St. Paul s Rome , Princeton University Press, 1915. Ph.D dissertion was published in 1910. Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Preston, Thomas J., Jr. ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH October 26, 1862 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH December 25, 1955 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Preston, Thomas J., Jr. Category 1862 births Category 1955 deaths Category Princeton University faculty Category Grover Cleveland Category People from Westchester County, New York Category People from South Orange, New Jersey Category Wells College faculty Category Writers from New Jersey Category Writers from New York US academic bio stub pt Thomas J. Preston ... more details
ThomasPreston born 1860, Kilmore, County Armagh died 1900 ref name DU cite web title ThomasPreston work Dictionary of Ulster Biography 1993 url http www.ulsterbiography.co.uk biogsP.htm accessdate 30 June 2009 ref was an Ireland Irish scientist whose research was concerned with heat, magnetism , and spectroscopy . He established empirical rules for the analysis of spectral line s, which remain associated with his name. In 1897 ref cite web title Irish Scientists and Inventors work Irish Patents Office url http www.patentsoffice.ie en student inventors.aspx accessdate 30 June 2009 ref he discovered the Anomalous Zeeman Effect , a phenomenon noted when the spectral lines of elements were studied in the presence or absence of a magnetic field. ref name FA cite web title ThomasPreston work The Free Dictionary by Farlex url http encyclopedia.farlex.com ThomasPreston accessdate 30 June 2009 ref ref cite web title ThomasPreston work Birr Castle Demesne, Voyage of Discovery, Irish scientists and engineers url http www.birrcastle.com irishScientistsAndEngineers.asp accessdate 30 June 2009 Dead link date October 2010 bot H3llBot ref He was educated at The Royal School, Armagh , the Royal University of Ireland and Trinity College, Dublin . From 1891 to 1900 he was Professor of Natural Philosophy at University College Dublin . He was a Fellow of the Royal University of Ireland and of the Royal Society , London and was a distinguished spectroscopy spectroscopist . ref name DU His two major textbooks remained in continuous use for over 50 years. ref name FA He enrolled in Trinity College ... cite book last Preston first Thomas title The Theory of Light publisher Macmillan year 1901 edition 3rd ed. url http books.google.com books?id QgseAAAAMAAJ&dq ThomasPreston light&printsec frontcover&ct ... Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Preston, Thomas ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 1860 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1900 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Preston, Thomas Category ... more details
Thomas Hiram Preston October 22, 1855 &ndash November 7, 1925 was an Ontario journalist and political figure. He represented Brant South in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario as a Liberal Party of Ontario Liberal member from 1899 to 1908. He was born in Mount Vernon, Indiana , the son of Reverend James Preston who had come to the United States from Lancashire . Preston apprenticed with the Woodstock Sentinel and then worked as a compositor at the The Globe Toronto newspaper Globe in Toronto . In 1876, he married Lillian Macdonald. He worked as a reporter in the United States and then returned to work at the Ottawa Free Press , becoming a member of the press gallery in Ottawa . He worked as night editor at the Globe and then was managing director at the Winnipeg Sun from 1882 to 1890. In 1890, he became the owner of the Brantford Expositor . Preston served as the first president of the Manitoba Press Association and was president of the Canadian Press Association from 1894 to 1895. He was first elected in an 1899 by election held after Arthur Sturgis Hardy retired. Preston later served as a member of the Ontario Parole Board. He died in Brantford, Ontario . He is buried in the Farringdon Burial Ground in Brantford. References Canadian Parliamentary Guide, 1901 , AJ Magurn External links http www.ontla.on.ca web members members all detail.do?locale en&ID 1722 Member s parliamentary history for the Legislative Assembly of Ontario http www.brantford.library.on.ca genealogy brntmpps.php Members of provincial parliament Brantford Public Library http www.ourroots.ca e toc.aspx?id 4497 History of the county of Brant , FD Reville 1920 Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Preston, Thomas H ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION Canadian politician DATE OF BIRTH October 22, 1855 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH November 7, 1925 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Preston, Thomas H Category 1855 births Category 1925 deaths Category Ontario Liberal Party MPPs ... more details
Infobox person name ThomasPreston Carpenter image image size caption birth name birth date Birth date 1804 04 19 df no yes birth place death date Death date and age 1876 03 20 1804 04 19 df no yes death place body discovered death cause resting place resting place coordinates residence New Jersey, United States nationality United States American ethnicity citizenship other names known for Lawyer and Judge of the Supreme Court of New Jersey education alma mater employer occupation years active home town spouse children parents signature website footnotes box width ThomasPreston Carpenter , born April 19, 1804, died March 20, 1876, was an eminent lawyer and judge of the Supreme Court of New Jersey . ref Charles E. Sheppard Biographies Of Gloucester, Salem and Cumberland Counties, New Jersey , pp. 131 132, 415. ref ref John W. Jordan, ed. Colonial Families of Philadelphia , Lewis Publishers, New York, 1911. ref Personal Carpenter was born at Glassboro , Gloucester County, New Jersey , where his father Edward Carpenter operated a glassworks . He was descendant of Samuel Carpenter , Thomas Lloyd lieutenant governor Thomas Lloyd , and Samuel Preston mayor Samuel Preston , prominent men in the early days of Pennsylvania. His father dying when he was quite young, ThomasPreston Carpenter spent his early life with his grandfather, at Carpenter s Landing, New Jersey Carpenter s Landing now Mantua Township, New Jersey Mantua . He married on November 27, 1839 to Rebecca Hopkins of Woodbury, New Jersey . They were the parents of four children. He was an active member of the Protestant Episcopal Church , serving as vestryman , Churchwarden warden , and deputy to the diocesan and general conventions. He died at his home in Camden, New Jersey on March 20, 1876. Career After receiving ... Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Carpenter, ThomasPreston ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION ... Carpenter, ThomasPreston Category 1804 births Category 1876 deaths Category People from New Jersey ... more details
Orphan date February 2009 File Monsignor Preston.jpg 200px thumb Thomas Scott Preston born at Hartford, Connecticut , 23 July 1824 died at New York , 4 November 1891 was a Roman Catholic Vicar General of New York, prothonotary Apostolic , chancellor, author, preacher, and administrator Life He studied in the Episcopal Church in the United States of America Episcopalian general seminary, located at Ninth Avenue and Twentieth Street, New York, where he was recognized as the leader of the High Church party. In 1846 he received deacon s orders, and served in this capacity at Trinity Church, the Church of the Annunciation in West Fourteenth Street, and at Holy Innocents, West Point . In 1847 he was ordained presbyter by Bishop Delancey of Western New York, his own bishop having refused to advance him to this order on account of his ritualistic views. He now served for some time at St. Luke s, Hudson Street, New York, hearing confessions and urging frequent Holy Communion . A student of the early history of the Christian Church and the Church Fathers , he gradually began to feel the branch theory untenable. In a change of personal conviction, he was baptized and received into the Catholic Church on 14 November 1849. In the autumn of 1850 he was ordained priest, and assigned to duty in the cathedral. In 1851 he was appointed pastor of Yonkers with out missions at Dobbs Ferry and Tarrytown . In 1853 he became secretary to Archbishop Hughes , and chancellor of the diocese. He was appointed ... . Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Preston, Thomas Scott ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT ... DEFAULTSORT Preston, Thomas Scott Category 1824 births Category 1891 deaths Category American Roman ... 1884 Devotion to the Sacred Heart . References reflist Attribution Catholic wstitle Thomas Scott Preston The entry cites PRESTON, Remembrances of My Brother Thomas BRANN, The Rt. Rev. Thomas S. Preston, Vicar General New York Catholic Family Almanac 1893 Monsignor Preston s Views New York, 1890 ... more details
ThomasPreston 1563 April 3, 1640 was an English Benedictine monk. He is now remembered for his writings on the side of James I of England in the allegiance oath controversy . Life He studied in the English College, Rome , where he was taught by Gabriel Vasquez . He joined the Benedictine Order at Monte Cassino in 1590. He was sent to England on the mission in 1603. He landed at Yarmouth and lived with Sigebert Buckley , until Buckley died in 1610. By then he had been indicted as a priest, and was imprisoned shortly after. ref name CE CathEncy wstitle ThomasPreston ref Expelled from England three years later, he took part at Reims in the negotiations for the union of the English monks of Monte Cassino, Valladolid , and the old English Benedictine Congregation English Congregation . He returned to England and was again imprisoned, first in The Clink in Southwark , and later in Croydon Palace of the Archbishop of Canterbury . ref name CE Preston passed much of the rest of his life in prison. ref Rev. E. Taunton, The English Black Monks of St Benedict , 1897 ref He died in The Clink prison, 5 April 1640. In one prison or another he wrote, under the assumed name of Widdrington, several works treating Weldon says that Preston evermore disowned the books written under the name of Widdrington, but there is no doubt that he was the author of them. Towards the end of his life, however, he ... References reflist Attribution Catholic wstitle ThomasPreston DNB wstitle Widdrington, Roger 1911 article Widdrington, Barons Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Preston, Thomas ALTERNATIVE ... OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Preston, Thomas Category 1563 births Category 1640 deaths Category Alumni of the English ... to the authorities of Rome. ref name CE Works Preston took the pen name of Roger Widdrington ... criminatur, Cosmopoli Lond. 1612 . This was attacked in 1617 by Matthew Kellison . Preston replied ... de Propaganda Fide. A cleare confutation of the Reply of T. F., who is knowne to be Mr. Thomas ... more details
ThomasPreston Davis , US Navy, born July 31, 1953 is a United States Naval Captain and Trauma Surgeon. While serving as a trauma surgeon at the Naval Medical Center in Portsmouth, Virginia , Davis rose to prominence for being lead clinical medical caretaker of the survivors of the USS Cole bombing USS Cole DDG 67 attack in Yemen and the survivors from the USS Firebolt PC 10 USS Firebolt terrorist attack ref Navy trauma surgeon gets brief visit home http www.wvec.com news military stories wvec military 071006 military trauma surgeon.44ff35c8.html ref which occurred during operations to protect oil platforms in the Persian Gulf . After transferring to Okinawa, Japan in 2004, then Commander Davis was deployed to Sri Lanka for the 2004 tsunami relief effort where the group from 3d Force Service Support Group now 3d Marine Logistics Group ref http www.marines.mil unit 3rdlogistics Pages default.aspx ref was sent to Point Pedro, Sri Lanka near the Sri Lankan Civil War Tamil Tiger Government civil war truce line . In late 2005, Davis was Chief of Professional Services for the joint relief effort in Shinkiari ref US Relief in Pakistan http www.paktribune.com news index.shtml?135002 ref in the Northwest Frontier Province of Pakistan ref III MEF helps quake victims in Pakistan https jnlwd.usmc.mil Sentry StoryView.aspx?SID 87 ref after the earthquake which killed approximately 73,000 victims. Additionally, in the spring of 2006, Davis led the medical relief effort ref US Relief in Indonesia http indonesia.usaid.gov en Article.173.aspx ref in Java, Indonesia following the earthquake in that area. Davis was frequently the face of US military relief operations in the 2004 2006 time period ... footers by script assisted edit Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Davis, ThomasPreston ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION Captain Thomas P. Davis, Navy Surgeon, Trauma Surgeon DATE ... DEFAULTSORT Davis, ThomasPreston Category 1953 births Category Living people Category United States ... more details
Thomas Appleby c. 1488 1563 was an English Renaissance music Renaissance composer and church musician. He was Informator Choristarum at Magdalen College, Oxford Magdalen College , Oxford from 1539 until 1541, where he was succeeded by John Sheppard composer John Sheppard . Appleby was also organist and instructor of the choristers at Lincoln Cathedral from 1538 to 1539 and from 1541 to 1562. Source ChoralWiki Thomas Appleby Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Appleby, Thomas ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH ca. 1488 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1563 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Appleby, Thomas Category 1480s births Category 1563 deaths Category English composers Category Renaissance composers Category English classical organists Category Cathedral organists Category People of the Tudor period Category 15th century English people Category 16th century English people UK composer stub England musician stub it Thomas Appleby ... more details
Thomas Simpson Kent , 1582 c.1628 was an English composer who worked in Germany. Simpson, a generation younger than William Brade is first heard of at Heidelberg in 1608. ref Four and twenty fiddlers the violin at the English court, 1540 1690 Page 155 Peter Holman 1996 William Brade and Thomas Simpson are examples of prominent Elizabethan composers of instrumental music who conducted busy and ... Simpson, a generation younger, was born in Kent in 1582, and is first heard of at Heidelberg in 1608, ... ref References reflist Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Simpson, Thomas ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION Composer DATE OF BIRTH 1582 PLACE OF BIRTH Kent , England DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Simpson, Thomas Category 1582 births Category English composers Category 17th century deaths ... more details
David John Thomas 15 April 1881 &ndash 13 May 1928 , often known by his bardic name of Afan , was a Welsh composer , conductor, and organist. Thomas is remembered mainly for his hymn tune s and songs such as Drosom ni and Cymru fach i mi . His other works include a cantata, Merch y Llyn Lady of the Lake , and a choral work, He fell among thieves , with words by Sir Henry Newbolt . References http yba.llgc.org.uk en s THOM JOH 1881.html David Thomas on Dictionary of Welsh Biography Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Thomas, David ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 15 April 1881 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 13 May 1928 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Thomas, David Category 1881 births Category 1928 deaths Category Welsh composers UK composer stub wales bio stub cy David Thomas cyfansoddwr ... more details
Category Olympic silver medalists in art competitions Category Thomaskantors Germany composer stub de Kurt Thomas Komponist eo Kurt Thomas komponisto nl Kurt Thomas ... more details
Other persons Thomas Welsh Thomas Welsh c. 1780 24 or 31 January 1848 was an England English composer and opera tic bass vocal range bass . Welsh spent most of his life in London and is now particularly remembered for his light hearted stage works. ref http opera.stanford.edu composers W.html Opera Glass ref Life The son of John Welsh, by his wife, a daughter of Thomas Linley the elder , he was born at Wells, Somerset . He became a chorister in Wells Cathedral , where his singing notice Richard Brinsley Sheridan heard of him, and induced Linley to engage him for oratorio performances at the Haymarket Theatre , London, in 1796. Engagements followed for the stage, in course of which he sang in many operas, some of which, such as Thomas Attwood composerThomas Attwood s Prisoner , were written specially to exhibit his powers. He was also brought into notice as an actor, mainly through the influence of Kemble. ref name DNB cite DNB wstitle Welsh, Thomas ref Meanwhile he was completing a musical education under Karl Friedrich Horn , Johann Baptist Cramer , and Baumgarten. He produced two farces at the Lyceum Theatre, and an opera, Kamskatka , at Covent Garden, and ultimately settled down to his main work, as a teacher of singing. He had great success with his pupils, among whom were John Sinclair 1791 1857 , Charles Edward Horn , Catherine Stephens , and Mary Anne Wilson , who became his wife, and sang in many important concerts. ref name DNB He died at Brighton on 24 January 1848 ... with Henry Bishop composer Henry Bishop Is He Jealous? operetta , 2 July 1816, London, Lyceum Theatre References reflist Attribution DNB wstitle Welsh, Thomas Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Welsh, Thomas ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION English composer DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1848 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Welsh, Thomas Category Opera composers Category ... singers Category English basses Category Operatic basses UK composer stub ... more details
Thomas Brewer born 1611 was a 17th century composer best known for introducing the glee music glee form. Little is known of his life. However many of his compositions have survived. Most of them are catches, rounds and glees but three instrumental pieces are stored in the Oxford Music School collection. Life A celebrated performer on the viol , was born probably in the parish of Christchurch, Newgate Street in London. His father, Thomas Brewer, was a poulterer, and his mother s Christian name was True. On 9 December 1614 Brewer was admitted to Christ s Hospital , although he was only three years old. Here he remained until 20 June 1626, when he left school, and was apprenticed to one Thomas Warner. He learnt the viol at Christ s Hospital from the school music master. The date of Brewer s death is unknown. Works His compositions are met with in most of the printed collections of John Playford and John Hilton composer John Hilton , published in the middle of the seventeenth century nothing is known as to his biography. His printed works consist chiefly of rounds, catches, and part songs, but in the Music School Collection at Oxford are preserved three instrumental pieces, consisting of airs, pavins, corrantos, &c., for which kind of composition he seems to have been noted. Two pieces by him are in Elizabeth Rogers s Virginal Book . References DNB wstitle Brewer, Thomas b.1611 External links WIMA idx Brewer Persondata NAME Brewer, Thomas ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 1611 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Brewer, Thomas Category 1611 births Category Year of death unknown Category English composers Category English viol players Category Glee composers UK composer stub ... more details
of John Goss composer John Goss , Cipriani Potter and his godson Thomas Attwood Walmisley , and in his last years a friend of Felix Mendelssohn Mendelssohn . s start s culture s bef before Thomas Sanders Depuis s ttl title Composer of the Chapel Royal years 1796 1838 s aft after George Thomas ...Use dmy dates date March 2012 Use British English date March 2012 Thomas Attwood 23 November 1765 &ndash 24 March 1838 was an England English composer and organist . The son of a musician in the royal band, Attwood was born in London . At the age of nine he became a chorister in the Chapel Royal . In 1783 he was sent to study abroad at the expense of the Prince of Wales afterwards George IV of the United Kingdom George IV , who had been favourably impressed by his skill at the harpsichord . After ending two years at Naples , Attwood proceeded to Vienna , where he became a favorite pupil of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Mozart . On his return to London in 1787 he held for a short time an appointment as one of the chamber musicians to the Prince of Wales. In 1796 he was chosen organist of St Paul s Cathedral , and in the same year he was made composer to the Chapel Royal. His court connection was further confirmed by his appointment as musical instructor to the Duchess of York, and afterwards to the Princess ... and Master of the Choristers of St Paul s Cathedral years 1796 1838 s aft after John Goss composer John Goss end References Nicholas Temperley Attwood, Thomas , Grove Music Online ed. L. Macy Accessed 28 June 2005 , http www.grovemusic.com External links ChoralWiki Thomas Attwood Thomas Attwood IckingArchive idx Attwood name Thomas Attwood IMSLP id Attwood, Thomas cname Thomas Attwood Video clips ... 1911 Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Attwood, Thomas ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT ... DEFAULTSORT Attwood, Thomas Category English composers Category Glee composers Category English ... 1838 deaths fr Thomas Attwood Compositeur he ru , sk Thomas Attwood ... more details
links ChoralWiki Thomas Hastings Thomas Hastings http www.mutopiaproject.org cgibin make table.cgi?Composer HastingsT Free scores at the Mutopia Project http www.thomas hastings.org Descendants of Thomas Hastings website http www.facebook.com pages Descendants of Thomas Hastings c1605 1685 73420529952 Descendants of Thomas Hastings on Facebook Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata Persondata NAME Hastings, Thomas ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION American composer DATE OF BIRTH 15 October 1784 ...Image Thomas Hastings.jpg thumb Thomas Hastings Thomas Hastings 15 October 1784 &ndash 15 May 1872 was an American composer , primarily an author of hymn tune s of which the best known is Toplady for the hymn Rock of Ages Christian hymn Rock of Ages . He was born to Dr. Seth and Eunice Parmele Hastings in Washington, Connecticut . He was a 3rd great grandson of Thomas Hastings colonist who came from the East Anglia region of England to the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1634. Hastings moved to Clinton, New York, as a youth. In that region he began his career as a singing teacher, being himself largely a self taught musician. Hastings compiled the hymn book Spiritual Songs with Lowell Mason in 1831, which included his most well known hymn Rock of Ages . He then moved to New York City where he served as a choir master for 40 years, from 1832 to 1872. Hastings was a prolific composer, writing some 1000 hymn tunes over his career, and what Mason calls the simple, easy, and solemn style of his music remains a major influence on the hymns of the Protestant churches to this day. Hastings 1822 Dissertation ... books?id RMTT1nmh6mkC&dq Thomas Hastings An Introduction to His Life and Music . Hermine Weigel ... 9 Crawford, Richard, and David W. Music Thomas Hastings . Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians Grove ... Hastings, Thomas Category 1784 births Category 1872 deaths Category American composers Category Burials at Green Wood Cemetery sv Thomas Hastings ... more details
Thomas Wood 28 November 1892&ndash 19 November 1950 was an England English composer and author . Wood studied at the University of Oxford and the Royal College of Music . In 1919 he was appointed Director of Music at Tonbridge School in Kent , returning to Oxford in 1924 to teach at Exeter College, Oxford Exeter College . During this period he composed several choir choral orchestra l works including Forty Singing Seamen 1925 , Master Mariners 1927 and The Ballad of Hampstead Heath 1927 . He went to Australia in 1930 and spent over two years travelling across the country. This prompted him to write his book Cobbers 1934 which the Australian Dictionary of Biography describes as still the most perceptive and captivating characterization of Australia and its people ever written by a visitor . He continued to compose and wrote several other books, including an autobiography, True Thomas 1936 , before his death of a heart attack in 1950. Miss St Osyth Mahala Eustace Smith 1886 1970 of Wormingford married Thomas Wood in 1924 at Wormingford Church. Before her marriage, on the 7th June 1918 The London Gazette reported St Osyth receiving an OBE for her work as Hon Secretary, Essex Local War .... External links http www.musicweb international.com garlands woodT.htm Thomas Wood, by Philip Scowcroft http www.bures online.co.uk TW wood.htm Dr Thomas Wood who lived in Bures, Suffolk from 1924 ... Cape, 1940 Music and boyhood Oxford University Press, 1925 True Thomas Jonathan Cape, 1936 References ... Hurd Michael Hurd Wood, Thomas ii Grove Music Online ed. L. Macy Accessed 23 August 2007 http www.grovemusic.com Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Wood, Thomas ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION English composer and writer DATE OF BIRTH 1892 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1950 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Wood, Thomas Category English composers Category English writers Category 1892 births Category 1950 deaths England writer stub UK composer stub ... more details
Thomas Farmer Floruit fl. 1685 was an English composer. Life Farmer was originally one of a company of musicians in London and played in the Wait musician waits . He took the degree of Mus. B. at Cambridge in 1684, ref Venn id FRMR684T name Farmer, Thomas ref The date of his death is fixed only by the fact that Henry Purcell wrote an elegy on him to words by Nahum Tate , published in Orpheus Britannicus , ii. 35, and beginning Young Thyrsis fate ye hills and groves deplore. This establishes the fact that Farmer died before November 1695, and probably he died young. Hawkins says that his house was in Martlet Court, Bow Street, Covent Garden . Works He contributed songs to John Playford s Choice Ayres, Songs, and Dialogues 2nd edit. 1675 . One of these is described as in the Citizen turn d Gentleman his was the sub title of John Ravenscroft composer John Ravenscroft s Mammouchi, produced 1675. Apollo s Banquet contains Mr. Farmer s Magot, for violin. His instrumental compositions are entirely for strings, in three or four parts. He wrote the tunes in The Princess of Cleve, which appear in a set of manuscript parts dated December 16 82, owned by Thomas Fuller Fuller possessed three other compositions in three parts by him, and various overtures are contained in British Museum Add. MS. 24889. He contributed songs to The Theater of Musick, 1685 7, and to Thomas d Urfey s third collection, 1685. In 1686 appeared his own collection of airs in four parts, under the title of A Consort of Musick, containing thirty three lessons. A Second Consort, containing eleven lessons, appeared in 1690. References reflist cite DNB wstitle Farmer, Thomas Attribution DNB wstitle Farmer, Thomas Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Farmer, Thomas ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION English composer DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Farmer, Thomas Category Year of birth missing Category Year of death unknown Category 17th century deaths Category ... more details
Dr Thomas Fitzgerald is an Australian Composer , Musical Director , Conductor music Conductor and Musician . Image violinThomasFitzgerald.gif right Thomas Fitzgerald, violin and bow Thomas Fitzgerald completed ... Hicks Composer Fellowship 2005 External references http wingsofmusic.net Thomas Fitzgerald s website ..., Scotch College, Melbourne Grammar, M.L.C. Kew and Wesley College. Thomas has composed a diverse range ... film score in Turtle World . Concert performances Thomas Fitzgerald s concert performances include ... Symphony Orchestras and contemporary ensembles on violin. Thomas has worked extensively in New York ... music Concerts. Musical Director Thomas has conducted Symphony Orchestras and directed productions ... musical The Phantom of the Opera as musical consultant. Composer and Musical Director Australian projects include Composer and Musical Director for The Opening Ceremony , Melbourne International Festival ... of One Earth Orchestra, Thomas has brought together an exciting new Australian music ensemble ... composers, such as Steve Reich, Stephen Ingham, David Baker, Keith Humble, Peter Sculthorpe and Thomas ... with multimedia artists. Thomas composed the music for Chika , a documentary performance .... Thomas was awarded the ABC Radio and Regional Content ABC Radio Arts Australia Council New Media Artist in residence for 2005 and a Peggy Glanville Hicks Composer Fellowship. Shower Songs Canaries in the Mineshafts , a radiophonic musical composition created during the composer s residency premiered ... and The Roaring Tiger , two programs exploring the renaissance of Irish Music presented by Thomas Fitzgerald and Siobhan McHugh were broadcast in March 2007 on ABC Radio National. Thomas Fitzgerald ... CHIKA soundtrack Thomas Fitzgerald 2008 http wingsofmusic.net Thomas Fitzgerald Violin ... Thomas Fitzgerald 1997 One Earth Orchestra Short cuts Chitter chatter Thomas Fitzgerald 2003 http www.afactor.net murrundindi Platypus Dreaming Thomas Fitzgerald producer String of Pearls Deborah ... more details
Other persons Thomas Ford Unreferenced date June 2010 Thomas Ford c. 1580 &ndash 17 November 1648 was an English composer , lutenist , viol player and poet. He was attached to the court of Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales , son of James I of England James I , who died in 1612. He was musician to the household of Prince Henry from 1610 to 1612, musician to the household of Prince Charles 1617 1625, and musician to Charles I of England Charles I from 1626 to 1642, the outbreak of the English Civil War . He was buried in St. Margaret s, Westminster . Ford wrote anthems, for three to six voices four sacred canons 35 partsongs six fantasia music fantasia s for five parts and a few other pieces for viols. His most important collection was probably the Musicke of Sundrie Kindes London, 1607 , which was in two parts. The first book included lute Air music ayre s, described as Aries for 4 voices to the Lute, Orphorion, or Basse viol, with a Dialogue for two Voices... the second part contained dances such as Pavens, Galiards, Almaines, Toies, Jigges, Thumpes, and such like... scored for combinations of viols. Many of the ayres are given in two versions one for voice or voices and lute, and another for four equal voices. An unusual feature of his music for viol is the occasional use of a sound effect a heavy pizzicato thump...with the first and second finger of the left hand according to the direction of the pricks. Some of his sacred music, found in two collections from 1614 and 1620, is unusual ... Ford, Thomas ChoralWikiName Thomas Ford WIMA idx Ford name Thomas Ford IMSLP id Ford, Thomas cname Thomas Ford The poem that appeared anonymously and without a title in a manuscript found in the library ... been attributed to Ford. Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Ford,Thomas ALTERNATIVE ... Ford,Thomas Category 1580s births Category 1648 deaths Category Renaissance composers Category English ... ca Thomas Ford de Thomas Ford Komponist it Thomas Ford ... more details
Refimprove date August 2011 Thomas Wells born January 8, 1945 in Austin, Texas is an American composer , pianist , organist , and arts organization administrator. Biography Thomas Wells began his formal composition studies at the University of Texas at Austin in 1960 with Kent Kennan and Clifton Williams composer Clifton Williams . He received his Bachelor of Music 1966 and Doctor of Musical Arts D.M.A. 1969 degrees from that institution, studying with Hunter Johnson composer Hunter Johnson . Wells founded the University of Texas Electronic Music Studio in 1967 and served as its director until 1975. He was accepted in Karlheinz Stockhausen s Composition Studio in Darmst dter Ferienkurse Darmstadt in 1968, and participated in the project Musik f r ein Haus Stockhausen 1971, 217, 222 . Wells joined the faculty of the Ohio State University School of Music in 1976, and continues to teach there as Professor of Composition and Director of the Sound Synthesis Studios. In addition, he has served as guest professor and artist in residence at the University of Novi Sad Serbia , University of Mainz Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz , and Ball State University . His works have been performed ... Stockhausen and hearing that composer s electroacoustic music for the first time marked the foundation ... Orchestra 1992 28 Discography Thomas Wells. 1987. 11.2.72, Electronic Music . CRI LP , SD443 Thomas ... 1968 . Darmst dter Beitr ge zur Neuen Musik 12, edited by Ernst Thomas. Mainz B. Schott s S hne .... Cologne Verlag M. DuMont Schauberg. ISBN 3 7701 0493 5. Wells, Thomas. 1981. The Technique ... Wells , Society of Composers http music.osu.edu faculty thomas wells Thomas Wells , Ohio State University School of Music Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Wells, Thomas Henry ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION American composer DATE OF BIRTH January 8, 1945 PLACE OF BIRTH Austin, Texas DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Wells, Thomas Category American composers Category ... more details
Thomas Clayton 1673 1725 was an English violinist and composer. Like his father, William Clayton, he had been a member of Master of the Queen s Music The King s Musick at the court William III of England William III and then studied in Italy. He composed music for two English language operas which are known to have been professionally performed, Arsinoe, Queen of Cyprus 1705 and Rosamond opera Rosamond 1707 . After the disastrous failure of Rosamond , he composed mainly chamber and vocal music. He was also the proprietor of a concert room at his house in the York Buildings of London near Strand, London The Strand , where he, Charles Dieupart , and Nicola Haym organized concert performances of his later works. They were advertised for subscription series in 1711 and 1712, but it is unclear how many of them were actually performed there. ref McGeary 1998 ref Works In addition to his 1710 cantatas with text by John Hughes poet John Hughes , Clayton s works include Arsinoe, Queen of Cyprus opera in three acts, libretto by Peter Motteux after Tomaso Stanzani premiered London, 1705 Rosamond opera in three acts, libretto by Joseph Addison premiered London, 1707 A Pastoral Mask 1710 If Wine and Music have the Power text by Matthew Prior London, 1711 The Feast of Alexander libretto by John Hughes after John Dryden London, 1711 The Passion of Sappho text by William Harrison London 1711 Ode ..., Thomas 1998 . http www.highbeam.com doc 1G1 54775095.html Thomas Clayton and the Introduction ... http books.google.co.uk books?id Ip6voIceW0AC&pg PA278&dq 22Clayton, Thomas 22 1673&hl en&ei ndmvTZ3 ... 22 201673&f false Clayton, Thomas , Companion to Baroque Music . University of California Press ... Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Clayton, Thomas ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 1673 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1725 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Clayton, Thomas Category British composers ... 1673 births Category 1725 deaths UK composer stub ... more details
BLP sources date May 2009 Deleted image removed Image Thomas, Andrew port 03.we.jpg thumb right Andrew William Thomas born October 8, 1939 in Ithaca , New York is an American composer . He studied with Karel Husa at Cornell University , with Nadia Boulanger in Paris , and earned his M.M. and D.M.A. Degrees ... Carter , and Otto Luening . Thomas teaches and was the chairman of the Composition Department at the Pre ... of the Pre College Division. ref name bio cite web title ANDREW THOMAS Director of the Pre ... 2011 01 11 ref In addition to composing, Dr. Thomas performs as a pianist, conductor, and is a guest .... Career Although he has taught throughout the world, since 2000, Andrew Thomas has become a regular guest of the People s Republic of China . Under the auspices of the Chinese Government, Dr. Thomas ... Chinese Works Piano Competition. In December 2001, Dr. Thomas went to Nanning , China to conduct ... last1 Kessler first2 Andy last2 Thomas publisher The Juilliard School url http www.juilliard.edu update journal 139journal story.asp accessdate 2011 01 11 ref Dr. Thomas is now an Advisor of the Guangxi ... to upgrade music education throughout China, Dr. Thomas developed a program which brought together ... 2009 in Beijing. Since 2003 Dr. Thomas has lectured, taught, and performed in Korea at a music festival ... Tom , all in Seoul , Korea. On October 9, 2004 Dr. Andrew Thomas gave a piano recital in the Juilliard ... from the Summer Palace . Dr. Thomas has also orchestrated his music for lyricist, Gene Scheer .... Thomas s marimba concerto, Loving Mad Tom with Evelyn Glennie as the soloist, J rgen Otten of Der ... Reflist External links http composers.com andrew william thomas American Composers Alliance page Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Thomas, Andrew ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH October 8, 1939 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Thomas, Andrew ... alumni Category Juilliard School alumni Category Juilliard School faculty de Andrew Thomas Komponist ... more details