Biography of Composer John Dowland

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John Dowland (1563-1626) was a composer of Renaissance England and considered one of the most prolific and well-known composers of English lute song. A composer and accomplished lutenist, he is probably the most well traveled English composer of his time. Through his travels he was exposed to the musical elements of his Italian, French and German contemporaries. He developed his own musical language, in which he created a unique style for the lute song. As a composer, he focused on the development of melodic material and was able to elegantly blend words and music with a wide range of emotion and technique. For the purpose of this document we will focus on the influence of his Italian travels. John Dowland’s use of chromaticism in his lute songs as can be directly associated with such as “All ye whom love or fortune.” In these pieces, we can see the influence on this genre through his travels to Italy and encounters with such composers as Marenzio.

A cosmopolitan composer, John Dowland’s music displays elements of his Italian contemporaries madrigal style through his use of chromaticism in the lute songs.

Let us begin by taking a brief overview of the lute and it’s function. In the fifteenth century, there was an evolution in lute playing. It had been played in an ensemble setting with a plectrum, a tool used to pluck or strum a stringed instrument. This technique limited the player to single line melodies. The technique evolved into strings being plucked with the player’s fingers, thus, making it possible for the lutenist to play intricate polyphony and turning the lute into a solo instrument playing two, three or even four lines of music at once. Out of this development the lute was transformed into a self-contain...

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...ugh the publication of his madrigals in Nicholas Yonge’s 1588 publication Musica transalpine, in which, Marenzio’s works were second in number. It is believed that Dowland went to Italy with the intention of meeting and possibly even studying with Marenzio in Rome, although there is no evidence that the introduction ever occurred.

We may not know for certain whether or not Marenzio and Dowland ever met, but we can definitely see Marenzio’s musical influence in Dowland’s lute songs. Let us firs

Works Cited

Atlas, Allan W. Renaissance Music: Music in Western Europe, 1400-1600. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, Inc., 1998.

Poulton, Diana. John Dowland: His Life and Works. Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1972.

Smith, Douglas Alton. A History of the Lute from Antiquity to the Renaissance. Massechusetts: The Lute Society of America, Inc., 2002.

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