Adrian Batten (c1591 - c1637) was an
English organist and Anglican church
composer. He was active during an important period of English
church music, between the Reformation and the Civil
War in the 1640s. During this period the liturgical music of the first
generations of Anglicans began to diverge significantly
from music on the continent. Among the genres developed during this
period by Batten and other Anglican composers was the “verse
anthem,” in which sections alternate between the full choir and
soloists, underlain and unified by an independent organ accompaniment.
Batten was born in Salisbury, and was a chorister and later
an organ
scholar at nearby Winchester Cathedral. He
studied the organ under John Holmes. (The date of his
birth is not known with certainty, but since John Holmes, Batten’s
organ instructor, left that post in 1602 when his chorister pupil would
have been about twelve years of age, Batten must have been born in
about 1590. Most sources give the year as 1591.) Batten remained with
the cathedral choir after his voice had changed, as evidenced by
graffiti carved into the wall of Bishop Gardiner's chantry that reads "Adrian Battin: 1608". In 1614,
Batten moved to London to become a Vicar Choral of Westminster
Abbey, and was apparently still at Westminster in 1625; The
Lord Chamberlain's Records for 1625 show that at the funeral
of James I (at which Orlando
Gibbons was organist and master of the music) Batten is
described as a "singingman of Westminster." In 1626 Batten became a Vicar
Choral of the cathedral choir at St.
Paul's Cathedral, and also played the organ there. As far as is known,
he stayed at this position until his untimely death. Letters of
administration for the disposal of his estate were granted to John
Gilbert of Salisbury (with the consent of Batten's three brothers) on
July 22nd, 1637, so it can be inferred that he died during the middle
of that year at the age of approximately 46.
To augment his income while at Westminster Abbey, Batten
worked as a music copyist, and the Abbey's account books record
payments to Batten for copying works of Weelkes,
Tallis
and Tomkins.
Batten is credited with the preservation of many pieces of church music
of the time, compiled in the “Batten Organbook” (now in possession of St. Michael's
College, Tenbury), a 498 page quarto in his handwriting. Containing
many popular works of that time, which Batten scored for the organ, the
Batten Organbook is the only surviving source for many pieces of the
time.
The Batten Organbook has few of Batten’s own works, so
ironically much of Batten's own music has been lost. Accordingly,
Batten is less well known than some of his contemporaries. He was,
however, a prolific composer. A number of works exist only in
manuscript at various British libraries and cathedrals, having never
been published.
Although by no means comparable with the work of the greatest
of the English church musicians, Batten's music possesses charms of its
own. Batten’s music has been described as follows: “It is serious and
somewhat sad, but not altogether devoid of more joyous touches. His
artistic sense was perhaps in excess of his technical powers, and his
self-restraint makes of his work something very suitable to certain
occasions. His counterpoint is skilful, and the atmosphere created by
his music is a pure and devotional one… There is one virtue in Batten's
sacred music which was possessed by only a few composers; and that is
his constant endeavour to think of music as the servant of divine
worship and not as the central figure of that service.”
Notes
-
Jeffrey Pulver, A Biographical Dictionary of Old English Music (London:
Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner, 1927) 46.
-
Jeffrey Pulver, A Biographical Dictionary of Old English Music (London:
Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner, 1927) 46.
References
- Andrew Ashbee, and Peter Holman, eds., Studies in English
Consort Music Studies in English Consort Music (Oxford, England:
Clarendon Press, 1996).
- David Henry, “Notes on Out of the Deep
by Adrian Batten,” The Church of the Transfiguration, <http://www.littlechurch.org/mn020317.html>
3/17/2002).
- Jeffrey Pulver, A Biographical Dictionary of Old English
Music (London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner, 1927).
- S. Sadie and George Grove, eds., The New Grove Dictionary
of Music and Musicians. (Oxford Univ. Press, 2000).
External links
- Free scores by Adrian
Batten in the Choral Public Domain
Library (ChoralWiki)
- Free scores by Adrian Batten in the Werner Icking Music
Archive