John Dowland
Julian Bream Edition, Volume 17: Two Loves Lyrics
Disc 1
- My Lady Hunsdon's Puffe, P. 54
- The Passionate Pilgrim: Sonnet "If music and sweet poetry agree"
- The King of Denmark's Galliard, P. 40
- The Phoenix and the Turtle: Envoi "Beauty, truth, and rarity"
- Mignarda, P. 34 "Mr Henry Noel's Galliard"
- Venus and Adonis: The Courser and the Genet "But, lo, from forth a copse"
- Queen Elizabeth's Galliard, P. 97
- Loth to Depart, P. 69
- Venus and Adonis: Death of Adonis "She looks upon his lips"
- The Earl of Derby's Galliard, P. 44
- King Henry VIII, Act III Scene 1: "Orpheus with his lute"
- Lachrimae Pavin, P. 15
- Sonnet No. 27 "Weary with toil"
- Sonnet No. 61 "Is it thy will?"
- Sonnet No. 109 "O, never say that I was false of heart"
- Tarleton's Resurrection, P. 59
- Othello, Act IV Scene 3: "My mother had a maid call'd Barbara"
- Twelfth Night, Act II Scene 4: "Come away, come away, death"
- A Fancy, P. 7
- Sonnet No. 144 "Two loves I have"
- Sonnet No. 129 "The expense of spirit"
- Melancholy Galliard, P 25
- The rape of Lucrece: "But she hath lost a dearer thing than life"
- The rape of Lucrece: "Ev'n in this thought"
- Semper Dowland, semper Dolens, P. 9
- Sonnet No. 119 "What potions have I drunk"
- Sonnet No. 30 "When to the sessions"
- Orlando Sleepeth, P. 61
- Cymbeline, Act IV Scene 2: Dirge for Fidele "Fear no more"