- Richard Farrant
Richard Farrant (c.
1530 -30 November 1580 ) was acomposer of English church music, also achoir master, playwright and theatrical producer noted for creating theBlackfriars Theatre that hosted children's companies.Very little is known about him. He became a gentleman of the
Chapel Royal in the reign of Edward VI, but resigned his post in 1564 on being appointed master of the children ofSt. George's Chapel, Windsor . In this capacity he presented a play before the Queen atShrovetide 1567, and again atChristmas of the same year, receiving on each occasion the sum of £6: 13: 4d. His plays, on classical themes, are all lost. In November 1569 he became Master of the Chapel Royal, holding this post concurrently with that at Windsor.Few of Farrant's compositions survive. The best known are a service and the
anthem s "Call to remembrance" and "Hide not thou thy face". The anthem "Lord, for thy tender mercies sake", often attributed to him, does not appear in any source under his name before the late 18th century and is now thought to be by the elder John Hilton. Other compositions attributed simply to "Farrant" in early sources may be by him or by one of two or more John Farrants, active inSalisbury in the late 16th and early 17th century.External links
*ChoralWiki
References
*1911
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