Together with his one-time teacher John Blow and the Italian immigrant Giovanni Battista Draghi, he created English baroque opera, with his Dido and Aeneas remaining the most popular of the genre. The shifting religious and court politics of his day resulted in his writing in a wide variety of styles, including everything from court odes to viol suites and keyboard music. His vocal music ranged from large scale hymns and anthems to intimate and popular songs which people would sing in the street. He could write sacred music of elegance and beauty, but was also a master of "catches", humurous part-songs with bawdy or seditious words.
The nonpareil of English music
Henry Purcell enjoyed a meteoric career and a reputation that outshone that of all his contemporaries. He was brought up in the tradition of English contrapuntal choral music, becoming organist of Westnminster Abbey at just twenty-two years old, but his main career was as a court composer at a time when French and Italian baroque styles were flooding into London. Uniquely, Purcell married the three traditions. He combined an impeccable ear for baroque harmony and instrumentation with a natural ability for counterpoint and a rare talent for setting words to music.
More about Purcell's life and music...

Purcell's Music Live
Find operas and concerts in Britain and the rest of the world.
Purcell
on CD
Find the very best CDs of Purcell's work
Key works
If you're unfamilar with Purcell's music, you have some treats in store. Listen to Dido's Lament from Dido and Aeneas, an extraordinary musical picture of the depths of despair, the Anthems and Services with their huge variety of vocal colour, or the wonderfully intricate instrumental fantasies (the Fantasy upon one note is particularly fine). To get you started, click here for a selectionEvents to attend
Purcell work isn't the subject of festivals on the scale of Haydn or Handel, but he features in a number of the more general exhibitions, and there will be several opportunities to see his music.
Purcell events in 2009....
Purcell
On Air
BBC Radio 3 has celebratory programmes through the year.
Anniversaries in 2009:
Purcell (b.1659) Handel (d.1759) Haydn (d.1809) Mendelssohn (b.1809) Tárrega (d.1909) Albéniz (d.1909)
Villa-Lobos (d.1959) Martinů (d.1959)
Portraits of Purcell by Sylvester Harding and John Closterman and score from The Fairy Queen reproduced by kind permission of the Royal Academy of Music.
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