John Blow (1649–1708) He was probably born at North Collingham in Nottinghamshire, England. He became a choirboy in the Chapel Royal at an early age and must therefore already have served in that capacity in another church, perhaps in Newark. Blow studied with the chorus master Henry Cooke, and later with Christopher Gibbons, the son of Orlando Gibbons and a composer of lesser rank. In December 1668, Blow was given the post of organist at Westminster Abbey, a prestigious position indicating his considerable keyboard skills. A month later he was taken into the royal court to serve as a performer on the virginal. His first works seem to date from this period, with the 1670 anthem,
O Lord, I Have Sinned, for vocal soloists, chorus, and organ, perhaps his earliest surviving effort.
Around this time Blow took on the young Henry Purcell as a student and was given the post of composer-in-ordinary for voices, an indication his vocal works had already found much favor. Blow was taken into the service of the Chapel Royal in March 1674, and in July he procured a post there as children's chorus master. During this period Purcell began a more intense regimen of studies with Blow, and a friendship between the two arose. In 1674 Blow married Elizabeth Braddock. She would bear him five children, of whom two would die before reaching adulthood. Elizabeth herself lived for only nine years after their marriage.
Blow was appointed organist (he was one of three) at the Chapel Royal in 1676, but despite his apparent successes and later affluence, he seems to have had some financial struggles during his married years, if one can judge by the family's modest living quarters. During this time and until 1685 - the year of James II's coronation - Blow composed most of his anthems and his opera
Venus and Adonis. In the late 1670s he began composition of a large group of songs, which appeared in anthologies from 1679 through 1684. Blow also began writing many odes during this period. His
Begin the Song (1684), the first of the St. Cecilia's Day Odes, for vocal soloists, chorus, and instrumental ensemble, is a masterpiece and one of his greatest works.
Blow continued composing at a fairly prolific rate in the latter years of the seventeenth century and garnered further posts, including master of choristers at St. Paul's Cathedral, in 1687. The death of Henry Purcell in 1695, was a devastating loss for Blow. He was moved by the event to write one of his finest masterworks in 1696, An
Ode, on the Death of Mr. Henry Purcell, for two countertenors and two recorders. In 1700 Blow was appointed composer of the Royal Chapel, virtually designating him England's greatest living composer. Ironically, his output slowed to a trickle in the succeeding years, and what little he did produce was not necessarily new: the 1702 anthem,
The Lord God Is a Sun and Shield, for vocal soloists, chorus, instrumental ensemble, and organ, for instance, is based on the 1686 effort of the same title.
Robert CummingsVenus and Adonis, masque en un un prólogo y tres actos (1685).
Fragmento del acto primero.
Fragmento del acto segundo.