This is indeed by Jeremiah Clarke. It has long been wrongfully attributed to Henry Purcell, as has another Clarke composition, the very popular Prince of Denmark's March (aka, the Trumpet Voluntary).
Hi John, I love your playing ! You really get into whatever you play. However, I do believe this is the Purcell trumpet voluntary, not the Clarke one.
Although popular wisdom has it that this tune was composed by Henry Purcell, recent research has determined that Jeremiah Clarke was the true composer.
BTW, the performance is a bit too mechanical for my tastes. The organist hits all the right notes, but the same could be said for a synthesizer.
@BillyRosinet I believe the piece you are thinking of is the The Prince of Denmark's March. For many years that was attributed to Purcell, but is actually by Jeremiah Clarke. If you search this channel, you'll find a video of that piece.
No, this is the work about which I am thinking. It was long attributed to Purcell. I have an LP recorded by the New York Brass Quintet in which this exact same piece is called "Two Trumpe Tunes & Air," with Purcell listed as the composer.
@BillyRosinet I did some research before I commented last time to double check my facts. THIS is by Purcell. THIS is Trumpet Tune and Air by Purcell, NOT Jeremiah Clarke. Trumpet Voluntary, also known as The Prince of Denamark's March is by Jeremiah Clarke and at one time was attributed to Henry Purcell.
Caddyorganist is right: This one is and has always been by Henry Purcell. You are thinking of another, similar, piece. A lot of the YouTube uploaders seem to have a hard time noticing the difference, which further adds to the confusion.
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I think you're right. It's a bit confusing, but this is Henry Purcell. Clarke's "Prince of Denmark's March" starts with "D, E..." as in "DEnmark" ;)
nyo267n 5 months ago
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This is indeed by Jeremiah Clarke. It has long been wrongfully attributed to Henry Purcell, as has another Clarke composition, the very popular Prince of Denmark's March (aka, the Trumpet Voluntary).
dmph3 1 year ago
Comment removed
dmph3 1 year ago
what organ is this?
ghpierson 1 year ago
Hi John, I love your playing ! You really get into whatever you play. However, I do believe this is the Purcell trumpet voluntary, not the Clarke one.
LarryFX1 2 years ago
I agree, this is Purcell.
caddyorganist 2 years ago
Comment removed
trmptplyr100 2 years ago
@caddyorganist
Although popular wisdom has it that this tune was composed by Henry Purcell, recent research has determined that Jeremiah Clarke was the true composer.
BTW, the performance is a bit too mechanical for my tastes. The organist hits all the right notes, but the same could be said for a synthesizer.
BillyRosinet 7 months ago
@BillyRosinet I believe the piece you are thinking of is the The Prince of Denmark's March. For many years that was attributed to Purcell, but is actually by Jeremiah Clarke. If you search this channel, you'll find a video of that piece.
caddyorganist 7 months ago
@caddyorganist
No, this is the work about which I am thinking. It was long attributed to Purcell. I have an LP recorded by the New York Brass Quintet in which this exact same piece is called "Two Trumpe Tunes & Air," with Purcell listed as the composer.
BillyRosinet 6 months ago
@BillyRosinet I did some research before I commented last time to double check my facts. THIS is by Purcell. THIS is Trumpet Tune and Air by Purcell, NOT Jeremiah Clarke. Trumpet Voluntary, also known as The Prince of Denamark's March is by Jeremiah Clarke and at one time was attributed to Henry Purcell.
caddyorganist 6 months ago
@caddyorganist Technically this would be just Trumpet Tune, since he's not playing the Air.
caddyorganist 6 months ago
Comment removed
nyo267n 5 months ago
Caddyorganist is right: This one is and has always been by Henry Purcell. You are thinking of another, similar, piece. A lot of the YouTube uploaders seem to have a hard time noticing the difference, which further adds to the confusion.
nyo267n 5 months ago
@nyo267n Thanks. As I said in a different comment, I researched this to make sure I wasn't confused. THIS is Purcell, not Clarke!!
caddyorganist 1 month ago
WOW!!! Fantastic!!
accousticdecay 2 years ago