Having just purchased Victoria's 1605 requiem on Amazon, Striggio's 40 part mass is also recommended. This is a newly discovered work and apparently influenced Tallis - does anyone else know this work and have any thoughts?
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Originally posted by Peter View PostHaving just purchased Victoria's 1605 requiem on Amazon, Striggio's 40 part mass is also recommended. This is a newly discovered work and apparently influenced Tallis - does anyone else know this work and have any thoughts?
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Originally posted by Peter View PostHaving just purchased Victoria's 1605 requiem on Amazon, Striggio's 40 part mass is also recommended. This is a newly discovered work and apparently influenced Tallis - does anyone else know this work and have any thoughts?
Peter, I am sure there was an article on this very subject,posted on the board a while back.
I don't think that the Striggio's 40 part Mass is a newly discovered work, I have known for about 5 yrs. Many Catholics are fascinated by Tallis' 40 part motet Spem in Alium, and recent research suggests that it may have been written for the marriage of Queen Mary Tudor, and King Philip II, Spain.
It has always been for a long time a contention in Catholic circles that Tallis took the format from Italian masters like Striggio. It is very unlikely it was written or performed publically in Elizabeth I's reign, because she had in effect cut the country off from cultural influences on the continent
Indeed, in the 1590's as the English government got more hysterical.
Latin style Masses and musical compositions were banned and anyone associated with them and particularly priests, could face execution.
Not surprisingly, Italian and Spanish composers as a whole gave England a wide berth.‘Roses do not bloom hurriedly; for beauty, like any masterpiece, takes time to blossom.’
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Originally posted by Megan View PostPeter, I am sure there was an article on this very subject,posted on the board a while back.
I don't think that the Striggio's 40 part Mass is a newly discovered work, I have known for about 5 yrs. Many Catholics are fascinated by Tallis' 40 part motet Spem in Alium, and recent research suggests that it may have been written for the marriage of Queen Mary Tudor, and King Philip II, Spain.
It has always been for a long time a contention in Catholic circles that Tallis took the format from Italian masters like Striggio. It is very unlikely it was written or performed publically in Elizabeth I's reign, because she had in effect cut the country off from cultural influences on the continent
Indeed, in the 1590's as the English government got more hysterical.
Latin style Masses and musical compositions were banned and anyone associated with them and particularly priests, could face execution.
Not surprisingly, Italian and Spanish composers as a whole gave England a wide berth.'Man know thyself'
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