found: His Second set of madrigals to 3, 4, 5 and 6 parts, 1960:t.p. (Thomas Bateson)
found: Concise DNB(Bateson, Thomas; b. 1580?; d. 1620?; composer, pub. 2 v. of madrigals; organist of Chester Cathedral, 1599; vicar-choral of Cathedral of the Trinity, Dublin, 1609)
found: Grovemusic WWW site, June 5, 2002(Bateson, Thomas; b. ?1570-75, d. Mar. 1630, Dublin; English composer)
found: Wikipedia, May 2, 2016(Thomas Bateson; Thomas Bateson, Batson or Betson (c. 1570-1630) was an English writer of madrigals in the early 17th century; he is said to have been organist of Chester Cathedral in 1599, and is believed to have been the first musical graduate of Trinity College, Dublin; he served as Vicar Choral and organist of Christ Church Cathedral, Dublin from 1609 until his death; he is known to have written church music, but only one of his anthems has survived, a seven-voice composition entitled "Holy, Lord God Almighty;" his fame rests on madrigals, which give him an important place among Elizabethan composers; he published a set of madrigals in 1604 and a second set in 1618, and both collections have been reprinted in recent years; he died in 1630)