Hart, James

views updated

Hart, James

Hart, James, English bass and composer; b. York, 1647; d. London, May 8, 1718. He was a singer in York Minster until 1670. He was then appointed Gentleman of the Chapel Royal and lay-vicar of Westminster Abbey. He settled in London and composed songs, publ. in Choice Ayres and Songs (1673–84), The Theater of Music (1685–87), Banquet of Mustek (1688–90), and Comes amoris (1687–94). He wrote Adieu to the pleasures and follies of love for Shadwell’s operatic adaptation of The Tempest (1674), publ. as one of 6 “Ariel’s Songs.”

—Nicolas Slonimsky/Laura Kuhn/Dennis McIntire

More From encyclopedia.com