Composers

William Lawes

Viol
Organ
Violin
Suite
Piece
Airs
Fantasia
Sonata
by popularity

A

Air and Fantasias for 6 ViolsAirs and Fantasia for 4 ViolsAirs and Fantasia for 5 ViolsAirs for 3 Viols

S

Set for 5 Viols in C majorSet for 5 Viols in G minorSet for 6 Viols in C majorSet for 6 Viols in F majorSonatas for Violin, Bass Viol and OrganSuite in G majorSuite No.1 for 2 Viols and OrganSuite No.1 for 3 Viols and OrganSuite No.2 for 2 Viols and OrganSuite No.2 for 3 Viols and OrganSuite No.3 for 2 Viols and OrganSuite No.3 for 3 Viols and OrganSuite No.4 for 2 Viols and OrganSuite No.4 for 3 Viols and OrganSuite No.5 for 2 Viols and OrganSuite No.5 for 3 Viols and OrganSuite No.6 for 2 Viols and OrganSuite No.6 for 3 Viols and OrganSuite No.7 for 2 Viols and OrganSuite No.7 for 3 Viols and OrganSuite No.8 for 2 Viols and OrganSuite No.8 for 3 Viols and Organ

T

The Royall Consort
Wikipedia
William Lawes (April 1602 – 24 September 1645) was an English composer and musician.
Lawes was born in Salisbury, Wiltshire and was baptised on 1 May 1602. He was the son of Thomas Lawes, a vicar choral at Salisbury Cathedral, and brother to Henry Lawes, a very successful composer in his own right.
His patron, Edward Seymour, Earl of Hertford, apprenticed him to the composer John Coprario, which probably brought Lawes into contact with Charles, Prince of Wales at an early age. Both William and his elder brother Henry received court appointments after Charles succeeded to the British throne as Charles I. William was appointed as "musician in ordinary for lutes and voices" in 1635 but had been writing music for the court prior to this.
Lawes spent all his adult life in Charles's employ. He composed secular music and songs for court masques (and doubtless played in them), as well as sacred anthems and motets for Charles's private worship. He is most remembered today for his sublime viol consort suites for between three and six players and his lyra viol music. His use of counterpoint and fugue and his tendency to juxtapose bizarre, spine-tingling themes next to pastoral ones in these works made them disfavoured in the centuries after his death; they have only become widely available in recent years.
When Charles's dispute with Parliament led to the outbreak of the Civil War, Lawes joined the Royalist army. During the Siege of York, Lawes was living in the city and wrote at least one piece of music as a direct result of the military situation – the round See how Cawood's dragon looks, a vivid and defiant response to the Parliamentarian capture of Cawood Castle, about ten miles from York. He was given a post in the King's Life Guards, which was intended to keep him out of danger. Despite this, he was "casually shot" by a Parliamentarian in the rout of the Royalists at Rowton Heath, near Chester, on 24 September 1645. Although the King was in mourning for his kinsman Bernard Stuart (killed in the same defeat), he instituted a special mourning for Lawes, apparently honouring him with the title of "Father of Musick." The author of his epitaph, Thomas Jordan, closed it with a lachrymose pun on the fact that Lawes had died at the hands of those who denied the divine right of kings:
Will. Lawes was slain by such whose wills were laws.
Lawes' body was lost or destroyed and his burial site is unknown.
In Jim Jarmusch's 2013 film Only Lovers Left Alive the character Adam receives a 1959 Supro guitar which he decides to name William Lawes in honour of this composer, who he describes as "... just some old 17th century English guy who wrote some great funeral music...", possibly confusing him with Henry Purcell.
Lawes is a character in Miles Craven's 2016 novel Pride Before a Fall Through Time.Lawes is discussed in Quentin Canterel's novel The Jolly Coroner in a comparative context with the composer Carlo Gesualdo.