
The composer Thomas Tallis (c. 1505 - November 1585) lived and worked through much of the turbulent Tudor period in England. Unlike many of his contemporaries, he did not just react to radical change: he thrived on it. He helped invent new musical styles to meet the demands of the English Reformation. He revived and reimagined older musical forms for a new era. Fewer than a hundred of his works have survived, but they are incredibly diverse, from miniature settings of psalms and hymns to a monumental forty-voice motet.In this new biography, author Kerry McCarthy traces Tallis's long career from his youthful appointment at Dover Priory to his years as a senior member of the Chapel Royal, revisiting the most important documents of his life and a wide variety of his musical works. The book also takes readers on a guided journey along the River Thames to the palaces, castles, and houses where Tallis made music for the four monarchs he served. It ends with reflections on Tallis's will, his epitaph (whose complete text McCarthy has recently rediscovered), and other postmortem remembrances that give us a glimpse of his significant place in the sixteenth-century musical world. Tallis will be treasured by performers, scholars, Tudor enthusiasts, and anyone interested in English Renaissance music.
This biography investigates how Thomas Tallis navigated the volatile religious and political shifts of the Tudor era to become a defining figure in English Renaissance music. Kerry McCarthy, a scholar of early music, utilizes primary source documents, archival records, and musical analysis to reconstruct the life of a composer who served four monarchs. The work argues that Tallis was not merely a passive observer of the English Reformation but an active innovator who adapted and expanded musical forms to suit a changing cultural landscape.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a significant contribution to Tudor musicology due to the author's rigorous archival research and discovery of new primary source material. Readers frequently note that the prose is accessible to enthusiasts while maintaining the academic depth required by scholars of the period.
Page Count:
280
Publication Date:
2020-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190635231
ISBN-13:
9780190635237
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