Peter Philips was, after William Byrd, the most published English composer of the Elizabethan-Jacobean Age. He was also, in his day, the best-known English composer on the European mainland but his absence from his homeland after the age of about twenty-one means that he remains relatively neglected at home. Born in 1560 or 1561, he trained as a choirboy at St Paul’s Cathedral in London and may have studied keyboard playing with Byrd. In 1582 he fled England to avoid persecution as a Roman Catholic, making his way to Rome. In 1585 he joined the entourage of another Roman Catholic refugee, Sir Thomas Paget, travelling with him through Northern Europe for the next five years, eventually settling in Antwerp in 1591. In 1593 he was accused of plotting against Elizabeth I and arrested, but was eventually exonerated. He joined the court chapel of Archduke Albert, Viceroy of The Netherlands, as organist in 1597 and remained there until his death in 1628.
The three years spent in Rome were crucial for the formation of Philips’s musical style. The early 1580s were years of rapid development in that city’s music, particularly in writing for multiple choirs. Philips wrote some double-choir music and the antiphonal principle underlies much of the music on this recording, even if written for a single choir of five voices: two sopranos, alto, tenor and bass – a texture that gives an overall brightness, often heightened by close spacing between the two sopranos.
Richard Marlow conducts the mixed Choir of Trinity College, Cambridge. About a previous release International Record Review wrote: ‘This is a triumph for Marlow and his Trinity college choir, for Chandos, and above all, for Mendelssohn’s reputation as an inventive and deeply rewarding composer of sacred choral pieces.’
PETER PHILIPS: CANTIONES SACRAE (1612)
Peter Philips was after William Byrd the most published English composer of the Elizabethan-Jacobean Age. He was also the best-known English composer on the European mainland, having left his homeland at the age of twenty-one to avoid persecution as a Roman Catholic. He made for Rome and then travelled through Northern Europe, finally settling in Antwerp. He joined the court chapel of Archduke Albert, Viceroy of The Netherlands, as organist in 1597 and remained there until his death in 1628. His style of composition was certainly influenced by his period in Rome, as his music for multiple choirs attests. Indeed the antiphonal principal underlies much of the music on this recording, even if it is written for single choir. Richard Marlow conducts the mixed Choir of Trinity College, Cambridge. of a On a previous release, International Record Review commented: ‘This is a triumph for Marlow and his Trinity college choir, for Chandos.’