Bibliography

tentative essay title here

 

Anonymous. A Pretty Ballad of the Lord of Lorn, and the False Steward. The Tune is, Green Sleeves. London: Printed for F. Coles, T. Vere, and J. Wright, 1663-1674.

Anderson, Norman Douglas. Aspects of Early Major-Minor Tonality: Structural Characteristics of the Music of the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries. Dissertation. 1992. Ohio State.

Aspden, Suzanne. "Ballads and Britons: Imagined Community and the Continuity of 'English' Opera." Journal of the Royal Musical Association. 122.1 (1997): 24-51.

Dugaw, Dianne. "'Deep Play': John Gay and the Invention of Modernity." Newark: U of Delaware P, 2001.

---. "The Popular Marketing of 'Old Ballads': The Ballad Revival and Eighteenth-Century Antiquarianism Reconsidered." Eighteenth-Century Studies. 21.1 (1987): 71-90.

Nelson, Leslie. "Greensleeves." Folk Music of England, Scotland, Ireland, Wales, and America. 2 March 2003. 4 September 2005 <http://www.contemplator.com/england/grenslevs.html>.

Gay, John. The Beggar’s Opera (1735)

Gay, John. The Beggar's Opera (1761)

"Greensleeves." Wikipedia

Handel, Georg Frederic. "Di ad Irene." Atalanta.

Keiser, Reinhard. "Hoffe noch." Croseus.

Robinson, Clement. "Green Sleeues." A Handful of Pleasant Delights.

Stewart, Keith. "The Ballad and the Genres in the Eighteenth Century." ELH. 24.2 (1957): 120-137.

 


Main Page | Essay Proposal | Archive Contents