additional: Alamire is to perform a work by Thomas Tallis which has not been heard for over 450 years as part of its concert at St Johns Smith Square on 14 April.
http://www.rhinegold.co.uk/choir_organ/tallis-work-receive-first-performance-450-years/
Music about his previous wives will be heading for debut later.
Reading about Tallis. He lived during the reigns of 4 monarchs, incredible times.
Thomas Tallis died peacefully in his house in Greenwich in November 1585; most historians agree that he died on the 23rd. He was buried in the chancel of the parish of St Alfege Church in Greenwich. To this day, the exact location in St Alfege Church of Tallis’s remains is unknown. His remains may have been discarded by labourers between 1712 and 1714, when the church was rebuilt. Nothing remains of Tallis’s original memorial in the church. Strype is said in 1720 to have found a brass plate with an engraving on it, which read:
Entered here doth ly a worthy wyght,
Who for long tyme in musick bore the bell:
His name to shew, was THOMAS TALLYS hyght,
In honest virtuous lyff he dyd excell.
He servd long tyme in chappel with grete prayse
Fower sovereygnes reygnes (a thing not often seen);
I meane Kyng Henry and Prynce Edwards dayes,
Quene Mary, and Elizabeth oure Quene.
He maryd was, though children he had none,
And lyvd in love full thre and thirty yeres
Wyth loyal spowse, whose name yclypt was JONE,
Who here entombd him company now beares.
As he dyd lyve, so also did he dy,
In myld and quyet sort (O happy man!)
To God ful oft for mercy did he cry,
Wherefore he lyves, let deth do what he can.
Thank you - but if it isn’t good, heads will roll!
Ping
Words you shouldn’t use in the same sentence, Henry VIII, wife, and heading.
Doesn’t everyone bury their sheet music in the walls?