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Encyclopedia > John Eccles
This article is about the English composer named John Eccles, for the Australian Nobel Prize winner, see John Eccles.

John Eccles or Eagles (1668 - January 12, 1735) was an English composer.


Born in London, Eccles first studied music under his father, Solomon Eccles. He was appointed to the King's band in 1694, and in 1700 became Master of the King's Musick. Also in 1700 he finished second in a competition to write music for William Congreve's masque The Judgement of Paris (John Weldon won).


Eccles was very active as a composer for the theatre, and from the 1680s wrote a large amount of incidental music including music for William Congreve's Love for Love, John Dryden's The Spanish Friar and William Shakespeare's Macbeth. Jointly with Henry Purcell he wrote incidental music for Thomas Durfey's Don Quixote. He became a composer to Drury Lane theatre in 1693 and when some of the actors broke off to form their own company at Lincoln's Inn Fields in 1695, he composed music for them as well. Eccles also wrote music for the coronation of Queen Anne and a number of songs.


For much of the later part of his life, Eccles lived in Kingston upon Thames and wrote little music apart from the occasional ode, instead spending much of his time fishing.


  Results from FactBites:
 
John Eccles - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (250 words)
John Eccles or Eagles (1668 - January 12, 1735) was an English composer.
Eccles was very active as a composer for the theatre, and from the 1680s wrote a large amount of incidental music including music for William Congreve's Love for Love, John Dryden's The Spanish Friar and William Shakespeare's Macbeth.
Eccles also wrote music for the coronation of Queen Anne and a number of songs.
John Carew Eccles - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (638 words)
When Eccles passed a current into the sensory neuron in the quadriceps, the motor neuron innervating the quadriceps produced a small excitatory postsynaptic potential (EPSP).
Until around 1949, Eccles believed that synaptic transmission was primarily electrical rather than chemical.
Eccles was a devout theist and a sometime Catholic, and is regarded by many Christians as an examplar of the successful melding of a life of science with one of faith.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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