'Henry Lawes' (
December 5,
1595 -
October 21,
1662) was an
English musician and
composer.
He was born at
Dinton in
Wiltshire, and received his musical education from John Cooper, better known under his
Italian pseudonym
Giovanni Coperario, a famous composer of the day. In
1626, Lawes was received as one of the gentlemen of the chapel royal, and held the position until the
Commonwealth put a stop to church music. Nevertheless Lawes continued his work as a composer, and the famous collection of his vocal pieces, ''Ayres and Dialogues for One, Two and Three Voyces'', was published in
1653 and followed by two other books under the same title in
1655 and
1658 respectively. On the
Restoration of the monarchy in
1660, Lawes returned to the royal chapel, and composed an anthem for the
coronation of King
Charles II. He was buried in
Westminster Abbey.
Lawes's name has become known beyond musical circles because of his friendship with
John Milton, for whose
masque, ''
Comus'', he supplied the incidental music for the first performance in 1634. The poet in return immortalized his friend in a famous
sonnet in which Milton, with a musical perception not common amongst poets, describes the great merit of Lawes. His careful attention to the words of the poet, the manner in which his music seems to grow from those words, the perfect coincidence of the musical with the metrical accent, cause Lawes's songs to be regarded by some as on a level with those of
Robert Schumann or
Franz Liszt. At the same time he is not lacking in genuine melodic invention, and his concerted music shows skilled use of
counterpoint.
Henry Lawes was the brother of
William Lawes, also a composer.