Career
editAfter some years as a lay clerk of King's College, Cambridge between 1562 and 1563, Woodcock was a singer at Canterbury Cathedral before being appointed Organist of Chichester Cathedral from 1570. He was appointed Master of the Choristers in November 1571 and led a recruitment drive for new choristers. By April 1574, Woodcock was in Holy Orders. In 1580, he resigned the Mastership of the Choristers in favour of Christopher Paine; however, he returned to the post in the last year of his life.[2]
Compositions
editWoodcock composed a total of five instrumental pieces of music (quintets for viols), four of which are dated 1578, in Chichester. They are pioneer compositions in the style later cultivated by William Byrd and other Tudor and Jacobean composers. He wrote three settings of In Nomine,[3][4] one of which is found in the Dow Partbooks.
List of works
edit- 1. Hackney a5
- 2. Browning my dear a5
- 3. In Nomine 1 a5
- 4. In Nomine 2 a5
- 5. In Nomine 3 a5
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Biographical Dictionary of the Organ | Clement Woodcock
- ^ Organs and Organists of Chichester Cathedral
- ^ Ford, Robert (1987). "Clement Woodcock's Appointment at Canterbury Cathedral" (PDF). Chelys. 16. The Viola da Gamba Society: 36–43. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 October 2013. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
- ^ ChoralWiki profile of Woodcock