Wycombe is variously identified as W de Wyc, Willelmus de Winchecumbe, Willelmo de Winchecumbe, or William of Winchcombe. He appears to have been a secular scribe and
precentor employed for about four years at the priory of Leominster in
Herefordshire during the 1270s. He is also thought to have been a sub-deacon of the cathedral priory as listed in the Worcester Annals or possibly a monk at St Andrew's in
Worcester. Wycombe left a number of documents with his signature, including a collectarium, a precentor's workbook, two
rotuli (scrolls) containing music, a summary and treatise on music, a history to which Winchecumbe added music and other books. His name also appears in a
Reading manuscript including the rota "
Sumer is icumen in", and on one of seven sets of four-part compositions in the Wintonia collection. Two of these compositions are partially preserved and parts of others are to be found in the
Worcester Fragments. Of these compositions, only
Alleluia, Dies sanctificatus is completely restorable. The works have a four-part polyphonic structure. One more fragment is found copied in the
Montpellier Codex. Wycombe's main period of activity was probably the 1270s and 1280s. He is best known as the composer of
polyphonic alleluias. Over 40 settings have been identified in several sources, a group of compositions almost equal in size to that of
Léonin, the earlier composer of the continental
Notre Dame school, but only one of the 40 can be restored completely; the others exist only in fragments. Some of his work appears in the Worcester Fragments, a collection of 59 manuscript leaves representing about a third of the total surviving polyphony from 13th-century England. Each of Wycombe's
alleluias is in four sections. The second and fourth contain the solo response and verse sections, while the first and third contain free polyphony. Stylistically they are similar to the
Reading Rota itself ("Sumer is icumen in"), emphasizing
tonic and
supertonic, and showing the English preference for the harmonic interval of the third. ==References==