Biography

Peter Phillips

Current as of May 2024

Peter Phillips has devoted his artistic career to the research and performance of Renaissance polyphony. He studied Renaissance music and gained his early conducting experience working with small ensembles with which he could explore rarities in the musical repertoire.

In 1973 he founded The Tallis Scholars, with which group he has given more than 2,500 concerts and made more than sixty recordings, encouraging a worldwide interest in polyphony. As a result of his work – which along with concerts and CD-recordings has included publishing new editions and writing articles – Renaissance music has come for the first time to be accepted as a central part of the mainstream classical repertoire.
In addition to directing the Tallis Scholars, Peter Phillips works intensively with other specialist ensembles. He is currently collaborating with the BBC Singers, the Netherlands Chamber Choir, the Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir, and El León de Oro (Spain). He is also Patron of the Choir of Merton College Oxford.

Alongside his career as a conductor, Peter Phillips is a well-known writer. For 33 years he wrote a regular music column for The Spectator. In 1995 he became the owner and publisher of The Musical Times, the oldest continuously-published music periodical in the world. His first book, English Sacred Music 1549–1649, was published in 1991 by Gimell; his second, What We Really Do was released 2013. In 2018 BBC Radio 3 broadcast Peter Phillips’s views on Renaissance polyphony in a series of six hour-long programmes.

In 2005 Peter Phillips was made a Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres by the French Minister of Culture. He is a Bodley Fellow of Merton College, Oxford, where in 2008 he co-founded the current Choir of Merton College. In 2021 he became an Honorary Fellow of St John’s College, Oxford.

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Peter Phillips Conductor
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Peter Phillips Conductor
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