Thomas Bateson

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(b? c 1570-75; d Dublin, March 1630). English composer. Possibly from the Wirral, Cheshire, he was organist of Chester Cathedral from 1599 and from 1609 of Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin, where he graduated BMus (1612) and MA (1622) at Trinity College. His two madrigal books (1604, 1618), while not specially original, include elaborately scored, serious pieces in a distinctive vein.



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Thomas Bateson, Batson or Betson (c. 1570 – 1630) was an English writer of madrigals in the early 17th century.

He is said to have been organist of Chester Cathedral in 1599, and is believed to have been the first musical graduate of Trinity College, Dublin. He served as Vicar Choral and organist of Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin from 1609 until his death. He is known to have written church music, but only one of his anthems has survived, a seven-voice composition entitled "Holy, Lord God Almighty". His fame rests on madrigals, which give him an important place among Elizabethan composers. He published a set of madrigals in 1604 and a second set in 1618, and both collections have been reprinted in recent years. He died in 1630.

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