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Duke Arts Presents

The Tallis Scholars

Wednesday, April 11, 2018 | 8:00 pm

Vocal Ensemble Series

Duke Chapel


Over the last four decades, London’s Tallis Scholars have become unquestioned authorities of renaissance polyphony — “ethereal and yet full-blooded, uplifting and yet grounded,” declares The Guardian. Their sterling reputation stems both from a steady stream of first-class singers and from the inventive programming of founder Peter Phillips, who approaches historic texts with reverence for their past and energy for ensuring their relevance in the future. Phillips brings that philosophy to bear with War and Peace, a poignant program of music dealing with suffering, death, and redemption, delivered in remembrance of the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I.

In Durham, the Tallis Scholars sing the program, fashioned as a mass, inside the soaring space of Duke Chapel. The ten Scholars begin with “L’homme armé,” the renaissance root of many subsequent masses, then proceed to the glorious Kyrie of Josquin’s own Missa l’Homme armé. They turn next to Arvo Pärt’s ethereal and deeply moving tribute to Mary Magdalene, The Woman with the Alabaster Box, and Tavener’s Song for Athene, sung at Princess Diana’s funeral. The concert ends with Spanish composer Victoria’s Libera Me (1603), a timeless prayer for the release of the dead that has created solace in the midst of tumult for more than four centuries.

Program

Monody: L’Homme armé

Josquin: “Kyrie,” from Missa l’homme armé

Guerrero: “Gloria,” from Missa batalla

Pärt: The Woman with the Alabaster Box

Jean Mouton: Quis Dabit Oculis

Lobo: Versa Est

Guerrero: “Credo,” from Missa batalla

Victoria: “Requiem Aeternam,” from Missa pro Defunctis

Guerrero: “Sanctus,” from Missa l’homme armé

Tavener: Song for Athene

Palestrina: “Agnus Dei,” from Missa Papae Marcelli

Victoria: “Libera Me,” from Missa pro Defunctis



Tallis Scholars 'Allegri: Miserere'

The Tallis Scholars 'Arvo Pärt, Tallis, Allegri, Lotti, Sheppard, Mouton'

The Tallis Scholars 'Victoria's First Lamentation'


“The Scholars gave the contemporary compositions timeless nobility, while making the music of the sixteenth century feel feel utterly fresh, modern and alive.”

Ottawa Citizen