Renaissance Music from England & Spain

St Mary the Virgin, Primrose Hill
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Event has ended
This event ended on Saturday 16th of March 2024
Admission
£15, £10 (student with card), child with adult free
Location

St Mary the Virgin, Primrose Hill

Nearest Tube/Rail Stations
Chalk Farm 0.44 miles

The work of two of the greatest composers of the Renaissance are compared and contrasted in this concert – William Byrd and Tomás Luis de Victoria. These are accompanied by motets from some of their most illustrious compatriots: Tallis, Tomkins, Guerrero and Morales.
Byrd’s Mass for Four Voices was written in the early 1590s, and published in 1592–3., probably the first of his three Mass settings from this decade.
Thomas Tallis was among the first to set English words to music for the rites of the Church of England. If Ye Love Me is a classic example of these new English anthems.
Thomas Tomkins was organist of the Chapel Royal during the latter part of the 16th century. When David Heard is not, strictly speaking, a liturgical piece, but a highly moving part-song dramatising King David’s grief at the loss of his son.
Victoria wrote two settings of the Alma Redemptoris Mater antiphon – one for 5 voices and one for 8 voices in double choir – and in this concise parody Mass, he incorporates material from both of his settings.
Cristóbal de Morales was the most influential Spanish composer of his time. Peccantem me quotidie is a powerfully vivid setting of a penitential text.
Francisco Guerrero was maestro at Seville Cathedral. Ave virgo sanctissima was his most successful motet and was published across the Spanish Empire.

Tags: Music

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