Daniel Roseingrave
Daniel Roseingrave (c.1655 – May 1727) was an English-born organist and composer mainly active in Dublin, Ireland.
Roseingrave probably hailed from the area of Gloucester, where he was organist at Gloucester Cathedral (1679–1681) and where he later sent his sons for education. He subsequently became organist at Winchester Cathedral (1682–1692) and Salisbury Cathedral (1692–1698), and finally from 1698 at both Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin and St Patrick’s Cathedral, Dublin, which "marked the beginning of a period of half a century when the Roseingrave family dominated the musical scene at the Dublin cathedrals."[1] He remained organist at Christ Church until his death in Dublin in 1727; at St Patrick's his son Ralph joined him from 1719.
He composed some church music including a verse anthem Lord, thou art become gracious. His works are often confused with that of his sons; a disentangling of the works of the various Roseingraves in Ireland was in preparation in 2014.[2]
His sons Thomas Roseingrave and Ralph Roseingrave were likewise composers and organists.
Bibliography
[edit]- Barra Boydell: Music at Christ Church before 1800: Documents and Selected Anthems (Dublin: Four Courts Press, 1999).
- –– : A History of Music at Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin (Woodbridge, Surrey: Boydell & Brewer, 2004).
References
[edit]- 1650s births
- 1727 deaths
- 17th-century Irish classical composers
- 17th-century keyboardists
- 17th-century male musicians
- 18th-century British composers
- 18th-century British male musicians
- 18th-century Irish classical composers
- 18th-century keyboardists
- Cathedral organists
- English classical composers of church music
- English Baroque composers
- English classical organists
- English male classical composers
- Irish classical organists
- Irish male classical composers
- English male classical organists
- Musicians from Gloucester
- 17th-century Irish male musicians
- 18th-century Irish male musicians
- 17th-century Irish organists
- 18th-century Irish organists
- Irish male organists