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(This does not include Gregorian Chants, Tones from I-IX (Fauxbordons) or Magnificats or Nunc dimittis in Latin). Works are assumed to be for SATB, with or without divisions, unless otherwise specified.
Alcock Jr in A minor
Alcock Jr in D
Alcock Sr in G
Aldrich in E
Aldrich in G
H K Andrews in D
H K Andrews in F (Treble voices)
H K Andrews in G
Amner (Cesar Service)
Arnold in A
Ashfield in D
Ashfield in G minor
Aston in G (Treble voices)
Aston in F
Aston St Andrews Service
Atkins in G
Attwood in C
Ayleward Short Service
Bairstow in D
Bairstow in E Flat (Unison voices)
Bairstow in G
Barnby in D
Barnby in E Flat
Barnby in E
Barrow in F (c.1720 - 1789)
Batten 1st Service (Also Short Service)
Batten 2nd Service
Batten 3rd Service
Batten 4th Service
Batten 5th Service
Bax in G
Beer First Service (Treble voices)
Beer Second Service
Bennett in D minor (Men's voices)
Berkeley Chichester Service
Blatchly Third Service
Blair in B minor
Blow in F
Blow in G
Blow in the Dorian Moder
Blow Short Service
Brewer in D
Brewer in C
Brewer in E Flat
Brewer in F
Bryan Norwich Service
Bullock in C
Bullock in D
Bunnett in F
Burgon Magnificat and Nunc Dimittis
Burrell (Treble voices)
Byrd Short Service
Byrd Second Service
Byrd Third Service
Byrd The Great Service
Carter Southwell Service
Chilcott Crescent City
Chilcott Downing Service
Child in E minor
Cleobury Short Service (men's voices)
Cook in C
Cook in G
Cruft in A (Collegium Regale)
Darke in A minor
Darke in E
Darke in F
Day in B Flat
Day in F
Davies in G (Festal)
Doveton SATB
Doveton ATB
Dyson in D
Dyson in C minor (Unison voices)
Dyson in F
Edwards in C Sharp minor
Ebdon in C
Farrant Short Service
Friedell in F
Gibbons Second Service
Gibbons Short Service
Gray in F minor
Greene in C
Harker in A flat
Harris in A
Harwood in A flat
Harwood in E minor
Hawes in D
Hemingway in E
Hemingway The King's Service
Howells in B minor
Howells in E major (Men's voices)
Howells in G
Howells Chichester Service
Howells Collegium Regale
Howells Collegium Sancti Johannis Cantabridgiense
Howells Dallas Service
Howells Gloucester Service
Howells Hereford Service
Howells Magdalen College Service
Howells New College Service
Howells St Paul's Service
Howells Sarum Service
Howells Westminster Service
Howells Worcester Service
Howells York Service
Hunt on American themes, with chants.
Hurford in A (Treble voices)
Hurford in F sharp minor
Ireland in F
Ives Edington Service
F Jackson in G
G Jackson Truro Service
Johnson on Plainsong Tones
Jones The Berkeley Service (Treble voices)
Kelly Jamaican Service
Kelly in C (Latin American)
Kelly Peterborough Service
Kelway in B minor
Knott Third Service
L’Estrange New College Service
Leighton Second Service
Leighton Magdalen Service
C H Lloyd in A
R Lloyd Durham Service
R Lloyd St Cuthbert Service (on Plainsong tones)
R Lloyd Hereford Service
R Lloyd St Radegund Service (Treble voices)
Lole St David's Service (Unison voices)
Long in F (Treble voices)
Lumsden Lichfield Service (on Plainsong tones)
MacDonald in A flat
Major in G
Mathias Jesus College Service
Millington Topsham Service
Moeran in D
Moore in A (Men's voices)
Moore First Service (Faux-bourdons)
Moore Second Service (Faux-bourdons)
Moore Third Service (Faux-bourdons)
Moore John Scott Service
Moore Collegium Sancti Johannis Cantabrigiense
Moore St Pancras Service
Moore St Thomas Service
Moore St Woolos Service
Morley First Service
Murrill in E
Nares in F
Naylor in A
Near St Mark's Service
Nixon (Faux-bourdons)
Noble in B minor
Orr Short Service
Ossewaarde in C
C H H Parry in D
Parsons First/Great Service
Patterson Norwich Service
Pearce in D (Double Choir)
Purcell (Daniel) in E minor
Purcell in B flat
Purcell in G minor
Radcliffe in C
Ramsay (Treble voices)
Ridout in A minor (Treble voices)
Ridout in B flat (Men's voices)
Ridout in F
Ridout Peterborough Service
Rogers in A minor
Rogers in D (Sharp service)
Rogers in F
Rose in C minor
Rose in E (Treble voices)
Rubbra in A flat
Sanders Gloucester Service
Sanders Hereford Service
Sanders Lichfield Service
Schuller St Thomas Service
Shephard Hereford Service
Shephard Llandaff Service (Treble voices)
Shephard Salisbury Service
Smart in B flat
Smart in G
Sowerby in D
Stainer in B flat
Stanford in A
Stanford in B flat
Stanford in C
Stanford in F
Stanford in G
Statham in E minor
Stewart in C
Sumsion in A
Sumsion in D
Sumsion in G (Treble voices)
Sumsion in G (Men's voices)
Susa St Thomas Service
Svane St Thomas Service (Treble voices)
Tallis Short Service, in the Dorian Mode
Tanner Southwark Centenary Service
Tavener Collegium Regale
Tippett Collegium Sancti Johannis Cantabrigiense
Tomkins Third Service
Tomkins Fifth Service
Vann Chester Service (Treble voices)
Vann Chichester Service
Vann Hereford Service
Vann Peterborough Service
Walmisley in D major
Walmisley in D minor
Walton Chichester Service
Ward First Service
Warren Bristol Service
Watson in E
Watson in E flat
Watson in F (Treble voices)
Weelkes First Service
Weelkes Fourth Service (Treble voices)
Weelkes Fifth Service (In medio chori)
Weelkes Sixth Service
Weelkes Eighth Service (for Five voices)
West in C (Men's voices)
Whiteley York Service
Whitlock in D
Wicks Cherubini Service
Willan in A
Willan in E flat
Willan (Faux-bourdons)
Williams in C
Willis Derby Service
Wills in D
Wills on Plainsong Tones (Men's voices)
Wise in E flat
Wise in F
Wood in A flat
Wood in A minor
Wood in C
Wood in C minor
Wood in E (Men's voices)
Wood in E flat No. 1
Wood in E flat No. 2
Wood in F
Wood in F (Collegium Regale)
Wood in G
Wood founded on an old Scotch chant.
Wright in E minor
In Western musical notation, a key signature is a set of sharp, flat, or rarely, natural symbols placed on the staff at the beginning of a section of music. The initial key signature in a piece is placed immediately after the clef at the beginning of the first line. If the piece contains a section in a different key, the new key signature is placed at the beginning of that section.
A clef is a musical symbol used to indicate which notes are represented by the lines and spaces on a musical staff. Placing a clef on a staff assigns a particular pitch to one of the five lines or four spaces, which defines the pitches on the remaining lines and spaces.
C or Do is the first note of the C major scale, the third note of the A minor scale, and the fourth note of the Guidonian hand, commonly pitched around 261.63 Hz. The actual frequency has depended on historical pitch standards, and for transposing instruments a distinction is made between written and sounding or concert pitch. It has enharmonic equivalents of B♯ and D.
The Mass is a form of sacred musical composition that sets the invariable portions of the Christian Eucharistic liturgy, known as the Mass.
Herbert Norman Howells was an English composer, organist, and teacher, most famous for his large output of Anglican church music.
Charles Wood was an Irish composer and teacher; his students included Ralph Vaughan Williams at Cambridge and Herbert Howells at the Royal College of Music. He is primarily remembered and performed as an Anglican church music composer, but he also wrote songs and chamber music, particularly for string quartet.
Anglican church music is music that is written for Christian worship in Anglican religious services, forming part of the liturgy. It mostly consists of pieces written to be sung by a church choir, which may sing a cappella or accompanied by an organ.
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Alan Ridout was a British composer and teacher.
Herbert Whitton Sumsion was an English musician who was organist of Gloucester Cathedral from 1928 to 1967. Through his leadership role with the Three Choirs Festival, Sumsion maintained close associations with major figures in England's 20th-century musical renaissance, including Edward Elgar, Herbert Howells, Gerald Finzi, and Ralph Vaughan Williams. Although Sumsion is known primarily as a cathedral musician, his professional career spanned more than 60 years and encompassed composing, conducting, performing, accompanying, and teaching. His compositions include works for choir and organ, as well as lesser-known chamber and orchestral works.
Fauxbourdon – French for false drone – is a technique of musical harmonisation used in the late Middle Ages and early Renaissance, particularly by composers of the Burgundian School. Guillaume Dufay was a prominent practitioner of the form, and may have been its inventor. The homophony and mostly parallel harmony allows the text of the mostly liturgical lyrics to be understood clearly.
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Harvey Grace (1874–1944) was an English musician: a composer, conductor, editor and teacher, best known for the 26 year period he worked as editor at The Musical Times.
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