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239:(1795), both of which were used in Catholic churches in Great Britain and more widely, through the 19th century. They are historically important in terms of the start of the revival of Roman Catholic liturgical music in England. Some of his motets and hymns are still sung in Catholic and Anglican churches today: the (Anglican)
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Webbe was an autodidact. He first discovered his aptitude for music when called on to repair the case of a harpsichord. During the course of the repair work he taught himself to play the instrument. Near the end of the job he was overheard playing it. As a result of this incident he turned to the
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in 1740, Webbe was brought up in London. His father died when he was still an infant, and his mother returned to London where she raised Webbe in difficult circumstances. At the age of 11 he was apprenticed to a cabinet maker, and during the first year of his apprenticeship his mother died.
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Webbe also published nine books of glees, between the years 1764 and 1798, and some songs. Arguably his glees are his best claim on posterity, though his church music was particularly influential. He wrote one
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or plain song which was song without music by monks in the monasteries, abbeys and churches of early Latin
Christendom. It was not however a form generally known to the Orthodox church of the Byzantium.
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Webbe was buried in Old St
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In 1766, Webbe was given a prize medal by the Catch Club for his "O that I had wings", and in all he obtained twenty-seven medals for as many
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Webbe married Anne Plumb in 1763. They had eight children of the marriage, the eldest son
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The
Penguin Companion to Classical Music. By Paul Griffiths. London: Penguin Books, 2004.
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Biographical
Dictionary of Musicians: With a Bibliography of English Writings on Music
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is also regularly heard in
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A Roman
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Samuel Webbe's grave, Old St
Pancras Churchyard, London
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39:(1740 – 25 May 1816) was an English composer.
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