Henry Purcell
96 songs with lyrics
All songs 96
- A Clockwork Orange Opening
- A Prince of Glorious Race Descended
- A Scotch tune
- Alex (Orange Mécanique)
- An ape, a lion, a fox, and an ass
- An Evening Hymn Upon a Ground
- Be merciful unto me
- But ah! - (The History of Timon of Athens, The Man-Hater, Z. 632)
- Cakes and Ale
- Cease, anxious world
- Celemene, pray tell me
- Close Thine Eyes
- Come all to me - (The History of Timon of Athens, The Man-Hater, Z. 632)
- Come if you dare
- Come let us drink
- Death
- Dido
- Dido’s Lament
- Dido’s Lament
- Dido’s Lament: When I Am Laid in Earth
- Fairest Isle
- For love ev’ry creature, Act IV - (King Arthur, Z. 628, ”The British Worthy”)
- Hark! how the songsters - (The History of Timon of Athens, The Man-Hater, Z. 632)
- Hark! How the Songsters of the Grove
- Hark! The echoing air a triumph sings, Act V - (The Fairy Queen, Z. 629)
- Here the Deities Approve
- How happy’s the Husband
- Hush, no more, be silent all, Act II - (The Fairy Queen, Z. 629)
- I attempt from Love’s sickness to fly
- I Came, I Saw, and Was Undone
- I love and I must, Z. 382
- I sigh’d, and I pin’d
- I was glad
- If love’s a sweet passion
- If love’s a sweet passion, Act III - (The Fairy Queen, Z. 629)
- If music be the food of love
- If music be the food of love, Z. 379
- In some kind dream
- Incassum Lesbia, incassum rogas
- I’ll sail upon the Dog Star
- Jenny, ’gin you can love
- Let each gallant heart
- Let monarchs fight for power and fame
- Let us dance, Act V - (The Prophetess, Z. 627, ”The History of Dioclesian”)
- Let us wander
- Love in their little veins inspires - (The History of Timon of Athens, The Man-Hater, Z. 632)
- Man is for the woman made, No.3 - (The Mock Marriage, Z. 605)
- Music for a While
- My song shall be alway
- O give thanks unto the Lord
- O God, thou art my God
- O let me weep, Act V - (The Fairy Queen, Z. 629)
- O Lord God of hosts
- O Lord rebuke me not
- O sing unto the Lord
- O Solitude
- O Solitude, My Sweetest Choice
- O solitude, my sweetest choice
- One charming night, Act II - (The Fairy Queen, Z. 629)
- Prepare, prepare, new guests draw near
- Purcell: King Arthur, Z. 628, Act III: Prelude While Cold Genius Rises - Song. “What Power Art Thou”
- Rejoice in the Lord alway
- See Nature, rejoicing
- See where she sits
- See, even Night herself is here, Act II - (The Fairy Queen, Z. 629)
- Seek not to know
- Shake the cloud from off your brow
- She loves and she confesses too
- Since from my dear Astrea’s sight - (The Prophetess, Z. 627, ”The History of Dioclesian”)
- Since the toils and hazards of war
- Sleep, Adam, sleep
- Sweeter than roses - (Pausanius, the Betrayer of his Country, Z. 585)
- The cares of lovers - (The History of Timon of Athens, The Man-Hater, Z. 632)
- The Cold Song
- The Earth trembled
- The Sailor’s Aria
- There’s Not A Swain
- They say you’re angry
- They tell us that your mighty powers
- They that go down to the sea in ships
- Thy way, O God, is holy
- What Power Art Thou
- What shall I do to show
- When I Am Laid in Earth
- When I Am Laid in Earth
- When I Am laid In Earth (Dido and Aeneas, Live With Residentie Orkest)
- When I have often heard young maids complaining
- Whilst I with grief
- Why should men quarrel
- With sick and famish’d eyes
- Ye gentle spirits of the air, appear!, Act III - (The Fairy Queen, Z. 629)
- You say ’tis Love
- Your hay it is mow’d
- Your hay it is mow’d, and your corn it is reap’d
- Ô Solitude
- ’Twas Within a Furlong