Tallis, T.: Spem in alium - Missa Salve intemerata
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Thomas Tallis (c.1505-1585) Spem in alium Salve intemerata (Mass and motet) Considering that Thomas Tallis was the finest English composer of his...
Thomas Tallis (c.1505-1585)
Spem in alium Salve intemerata (Mass and motet)
Considering that Thomas Tallis was the finest English
composer of his generation, it is surprising how little we
know about his life. The first time we hear of Tallis is in
1530 when he was organist at Dover Priory in Kent: by
then he was clearly a respected professional musician.
We also know that Tallis was described as being 'very
aged' in 1577 and that he died in November 1585.
Taking these three pieces of information together, the
consensus is that Tallis was born around 1505 (thus
placing him in his mid-twenties while working at Dover,
in his early-seventies when he was described as 'very
aged', and in his eightieth year when he died). Hardly
conclusive, but there is not much else to go on.
The motet Salve intemerata is a setting of a long
prose prayer to the Virgin Mary and is written for five
voices in an expansively Catholic style. We know
nothing of Tallis's whereabouts when he wrote this
large-scale motet, but we do know that the oldest
manuscript in which the motet survives was copied in
the late 1520s and that the words are recorded in a Book
of Hours which appeared in 1527. Yet in spite of its
early date, Salve intemerata shows Tallis writing music
of considerable fluency and invention, quite an
achievement for a composer in his early twenties. With
a composition portfolio that contained a work as
substantial and proficient as this one, it is not difficult to
see why Tallis was appointed to Dover Priory as a
young man.
In 1535 Dover Priory was dissolved, and Tallis's
job with it. By 1537 he was working at the church of St
Mary-at-Hill in London. St Mary-at-Hill was an
important musical foundation, and from there Tallis
seems to have begun his association with the English
royal court (in 1577 Tallis was described as 'serving
your royal ancestors for forty years'). It is at this time
that the Missa Salve intemerata may have been written.
The Mass borrows heavily from the motet, particularly
in the Gloria and Credo, yet it shows that Tallis's style
had matured in the intervening years. More concise,
direct, and vocally more pragmatic than the lengthy
motet, the Mass is his finest pre-Reformation
achievement. The reason that the Missa Salve
intemerata is not better known today is that one of the
voice parts requires reconstruction (the Tenor part-book
has been lost). Fortunately the missing part is the one
directly above the lowest voice, the easiest one to
reconstruct within this texture.
By 1538 Tallis was a senior member of the music
staff at Waltham Abbey in Essex, but yet again Tallis's
job dissolved along with the Abbey in 1540.
Undeterred, he moved to the newly-founded secular
establishment at Canterbury Cathedral, where he sang as
part of the choir of twenty-two men and boys. The
Reformation had a profound effect on English church
music, most tangibly during the reign of Edward VI
when late-medieval Latin polyphony, as exemplified by
the Salve intemerata and its Mass, became outlawed.
Tallis maintained his craft and his compositional voice,
and provided the Church of England with largely
homophonic music to English texts. He was, above all, a
pragmatist, and he allowed the intimacy and directness
of expression which this new style required to give
another dimension to his compositional vision. Indeed,
turbulent though this English liturgical revolution must
have been to a lifelong Catholic, Tallis accepted the new
musical order and learnt from it.
Some of Tallis's English-texted music was written
in the Edwardine years of the Reformation, and the rest
of it in Elizabethan England. I call and cry began life as
an instrumental piece and only later did Tallis add
words to it. Some time later it also became the Latin
motet O sacrum convivium, yet the English word-setting
is more fluid and convincing than the Latin version.
Perhaps the reverse is true of With all our heart whose
earliest text is clearly the Latin motet Salvator mundi.
Most interesting of all is the 'Armada' anthem,
Discomfort them, which acquired these English words
three years after Tallis's death. Having been conceived
as the Latin motet Absterge Domine, the belligerent
English text was hurriedly wrapped around the motet's
scaffolding 'on the occasion of the Spanish invasion in
1588'.
Tallis served at court under four monarchs during
his long life (Henry VIII, Edward VI, Mary, and
Elizabeth) as singer, organist, choir trainer, and
composer. His musical genius and his years of service at
court were recognised in 1573 by the granting of a
license which allowed him and his supposed pupil
William Byrd to maintain a monopoly over the printing
and publication of music and music paper for 21 years.
This extraordinary royal favour seems to have followed
hard on the heels of the finest musical achievement of
his career, the composition of the forty-voice motet
Spem in alium. In 1567 the Mantuan composer
Alessandro Striggio came to London; he brought with
him Ecce beatam lucem, a motet in forty parts.
According to a recollection of 1611, a music-loving
Duke (possibly the Duke of Norfolk) 'asked whether
none of our Englishmen could set as good a song'.
Consequently, 'Tallis, being very skilful, was felt to try
whether he would undertake the matter, which he did,
and made one of forty parts which was sung in the Long
Gallery at Arundel House'. Arundel House, off
London's Strand, belonged to Norfolk's father-in-law,
the Earl of Arundel, who ran a strong musical
establishment. Moreover the Earl of Arundel also had a
country residence, Nonsuch Palace, which had an
octagonal banqueting-hall. At Nonsuch Palace the
octagonal hall would presumably have necessitated a
performance of Spem in alium 'in the round', the
octagon accommodating eight choirs of five voices
each. It is unlikely that early audiences were either
aware that all forty voices enter together for the first
time at the fortieth semibreve, or that the piece lasts 69
longs (in the Latin alphabet, where I and J are the same
letter, T=19, A=1, L=11, L=11, I=9, S=18, so TALLIS
= 69). But those fortunate listeners surely shared the
most impressive aural experience of their lives, and the
number symbolism is a mark of the fact that when Tallis
attempted something that must have seemed impossible
to the average musician of his day, he still had technique
in reserve.
This recording of Spem in alium was made using
'surround sound' (available on Naxos SACD 6.110111
and DVD-A 5.110111). The forty voices were arranged
to form four sides of a huge St-Chad cross: Choirs 1 & 2
to the West, 3 & 4 to the North, 5 & 6 to the East, and 7
& 8 to the South. The recording was made to celebrate
the 500th anniversary of Tallis's birth and the 21st
birthday of Oxford Camerata -- old members of Oxford
Camerata met with their new counterparts for this
performance of Tallis's masterpiece.
Jeremy Summerly
Spem in alium (more info)
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Spem in alium - 12:16
Mass, "Salve intemerata" (more info)
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Salve intemerata - 23:14
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Gloria - 6:43
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Credo - 7:57
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Sanctus - 7:47
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Agnus Dei - 5:25
With all our hearts (more info)
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With all our heart - 3:17
Discomfort them, O Lord (more info)
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Discomfort them, O Lord - 6:36
I call and cry to thee (more info)
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I call and cry to thee, O Lord - 4:13