Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Robert Jones (born 11 March 1945) is a Welsh composer, organist and choirmaster . Biography. Jones studied music at the University of Wales and has a Fellowship Diploma from the Royal College of Organists. After 30 years as a high-school teacher, he is now retired, but still active as a composer and organist. He now lives in Monmouth, South Wales .

  2. Robert Jones (c. 1577 – 1617) was an English lutenist and composer, the most prolific of the English lute song composers (along with Thomas Campion). He received the degree of B.Mus. from Oxford in 1597 (St. Edmund Hall).

  3. May 14, 2018 · Jones, Robert, English lutenist and composer; b. c. 1570; d. c. 1615. He studied at the Univ. of Oxford (Mus.B., 1597). With several other musicians, he was granted a patent to form the “Children of the Réveils of the Queene.”

  4. JONES, ROBERT (WILFRID) (1862 - 1929), musician. Born 5 July 1862 at Tyddyn-bach, Arthog, Meironnydd, the son of Meredith and Jane Jones. He joined a band when he was quite young and became a competent player of the cornet.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Robert_JonesRobert Jones - Wikipedia

    Robert Jones (composer) (died 1617), English lutenist and composer; Robert Jones (Welsh composer) (born 1945), Welsh composer, organist and choirmaster; Robert W. Jones (1932–1997), American classical composer; Writers and illustrators. Bob Jones, writer of the syndicated Goren Bridge newspaper column

  6. Robert Jones (b. 1945) lives in Monmouth, a small town on the border between England and Wales, and works as a composer, organist and examiner. The elegant, dignified style of his organ and choral works has met with an overwhelming echo in the German-speaking world since he began co-operating with Butz-Verlag: the Romantic English sound and ...

  7. Robert Jones was a songwriter of the school of English lutenists that flourished at the turn of the 17th century. Little is known about his life except that he received a bachelor of music degree at the University of Oxford in 1597 and that in 1610 he and Philip Rosseter and two others were granted.