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===The English song-books of 1588 and 1589=== In 1588 and 1589 Byrd also published two collections of English songs.{{sfn|Smith|2016<!-- |p= -->}} The first, ''Psalms, Sonnets and Songs of Sadness and Pietie'' (1588), contains the first [[madrigal]]s published in England.{{sfn|Walker|1952|p=77}} It consists mainly of adapted [[consort songs]], which Byrd, probably guided by commercial instincts, had turned into vocal part-songs by adding words to the accompanying instrumental parts and labelling the original solo voice as "the first singing part". The consort song, which was the most popular form of vernacular polyphony in England in the third quarter of the sixteenth century, was a solo song for a high voice (often sung by a boy) accompanied by a consort of four consort instruments (normally viols). As the title of Byrd's collection implies, consort songs varied widely in character. Many were settings of metrical psalms, in which the solo voice sings a melody in the manner of the numerous metrical psalm collections of the day (e.g. ''[[Sternhold and Hopkins Psalter]]'', 1562) with each line prefigured by imitation in the accompanying instruments. Others are dramatic elegies, intended to be performed in the [[Boy player#Children's companies|boy-plays]] which were popular in Tudor London. A popular source for song settings was Richard Edwards' ''The paradyse of dainty devices'' (1576) of which seven settings in consort song form survive. Byrd's 1588 collection, which complicates the form as he inherited it from Parsons, [[Richard Farrant]] and others, reflects this tradition. The "psalms" section sets texts drawn from Sternhold's psalter of 1549 in the traditional manner, while the 'sonnets and pastorals' section employs lighter, more rapid motion with crotchet (quarter-note) pulse, and sometimes triple metre (''Though Amaryllis dance in green, If women could be fair''). Poetically, the set (together with other evidence) reflects Byrd's involvement with the literary circle surrounding [[Sir Philip Sidney]], whose influence at Court was at its height in the early 1580s. Byrd set three of the songs from Sidney's [[sonnet]] sequence ''[[Astrophel and Stella]]'', as well as poems by other members of the Sidney circle, and also included two elegies on Sidney's death in the [[Battle of Zutphen]] in 1586.{{sfn|Grapes|2018<!-- |p= -->}} But the most popular item in the set was the [[Lullaby]] (''Lullay lullaby'') which blends the tradition of the dramatic lament with the cradle-songs found in some early boy-plays and medieval [[mystery plays]]. It long retained its popularity. In 1602, Byrd's patron Edward Somerset, 4th Earl of Worcester, discussing Court fashions in music, predicted that "in winter lullaby, an owld song of Mr Birde, wylbee more in request as I thinke." The ''Songs of Sundrie Natures'' (1589) contain sections in three, four, five and six parts, a format which follows the plan of many Tudor manuscript collections of household music and was probably intended to emulate the madrigal collection [[Musica transalpina]], which had appeared in print the previous year. Byrd's set contains compositions in a wide variety of musical styles, reflecting the variegated character of the texts which he was setting. The three-part section includes settings of metrical versions of the seven [[penitential psalms]], in an archaic style which reflects the influence of the psalm collections. Other items from the three-part and four-part section are in a lighter vein, employing a line-by-line imitative technique and a predominant crotchet pulse (''The nightingale so pleasant (a3), Is love a boy? (a4)''). The five-part section includes vocal part-songs which show the influence of the "adapted consort song" style of the 1588 set but which seem to have been conceived as all-vocal part-songs. Byrd also bowed to tradition by setting two carols in the traditional form with alternating verses and burdens, (''From Virgin's womb this day did spring, An earthly tree, a heavenly fruit, both a6'') and even included an ''anthem'', a setting of the Easter prose ''Christ rising again'' which also circulated in church choir manuscripts with organ accompaniment.
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