Daniel Bacheler

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Mounsieurs Almanie 00:00 Tools
Prelude 00:00 Tools
Courante 00:00 Tools
Fantasie 00:00 Tools
Mounsiers Almaine 00:00 Tools
Galliard upon a Galliard 00:00 Tools
Pavin 00:00 Tools
Pavan 00:00 Tools
Galliard 00:00 Tools
La jeune fillette' 00:00 Tools
Monsieur's Almain 00:00 Tools
Courante in B-Flat Minor 00:00 Tools
A Galliard 00:00 Tools
A Pavin 00:00 Tools
En me revenant 00:00 Tools
Volta 00:00 Tools
Daniells Jigge 00:00 Tools
Le jeune filette 00:00 Tools
Almaine 00:00 Tools
Pavan in D Major 00:00 Tools
Fin de galliarde 00:00 Tools
A Gallyard 00:00 Tools
Une jeune fillette: Une Jeune Fillette 00:00 Tools
Pavane No. 18 00:00 Tools
Monsieur's Almain: Mounsiers Almaine 00:00 Tools
Une Jeune Fillette 00:00 Tools
To plead my faith 00:00 Tools
La jeune fillette 00:00 Tools
Galliard upon a galliard by John Dowland 00:00 Tools
Mounsiers almain for lute 00:00 Tools
Courante, For Lute (No. 36 From Selected Works For Lute) 00:00 Tools
La Jeune Fillette, For Lute (No. 41 From Selected Works For Lute) 00:00 Tools
Mounsieurs Almaine, For Lute (No. 40a From Selected Works For Lute) 00:00 Tools
A Pavin, For Lute (No. 18 From Selected Works For Lute) 00:00 Tools
En Me Revenant, For Lute (No. 43 From Selected Works For Lute) 00:00 Tools
Monsieur's Almaine 00:00 Tools
Fantasies, Ayres and Dances: Elizabethan and Jacobean Consort Music - Daniel's Almain (1:46) 00:00 Tools
Volta, For Lute (No. 38 From Selected Works For Lute) 00:00 Tools
Pavan for lute 00:00 Tools
En Me Reverant: En me reverant 00:00 Tools
"La jeune fillette" 00:00 Tools
Pavane No 18 00:00 Tools
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Daniel Bacheler (baptized 16 March 1572; died 1619) was an English lutenist and composer. Bacheler was born at Aston Clinton, Buckinghamshire, and served an apprenticeship with Thomas Cardell who was a lutenist and dancing-master in the court of Queen Elizabeth I. He worked for Sir Francis Walsingham, Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex, and finally as a groom of the privy chamber for Queen Anne of Denmark, consort of James I. At the royal court he composed some fifty lute pieces. These included a number of pavans, galliards, almaines and fantasies, including a piece titled "Monsieurs Almaine". Elizabeth Roche, reviewing a CD of his work for the Daily Telegraph commented on the current neglect of Bacheler's music, suggesting that one reason is the "difficulty of his ornamental style, including arpeggios, trills, and even the dazzling tremolos that conclude his variations on Mounsieurs Almaine". The Heralds Visitation records show that Bacheler received a grant of arms in 1606. He was buried on 29 January 1618/1619 in St Margaret's churchyard, Lee, Kent. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.