Peter
                    Philips was brought up by Sebastian Westcote, the catholic
                    layman who from 1547 was master of the choristers at St.
                    Paul’s and who, apart from his musical duties, organised
                    the performance of plays at court by the ‘Children of Paul’s’ from
                    1557 until his death in 1582. Perhaps the young Philips acted
                    in some of these plays – plays which were important in the
                    evolution of Elizabethan drama? Several future composers
                    were youthful choristers under Westcote’s tuition – their
                    number included Robert Knight and William Fox, Thomas Morley,
                    William Byrd – and Peter Philips. Perhaps it was also from
                    Westcote that Philips learned his Catholicism? Certainly
                    he was a beneficiary of Westcote’s death in 1582. It was
                    surely not coincidental that it was in that same year that
                    Philips left England for good; he was in Rome by October
                    of 1582. He was admitted to the English Jesuit College and
                    also entered the service of Cardinal Farnese. 
                    
                He spent three
                    years in Rome – at a time when great composers such as Palestrina,
                    Marenzio and Victoria were at work in the city. The influence
                    of Palestrina and Victoria (and Lassus) is audible in Philips’s
                    choral works and that of Marenzio in his madrigals; nor need
                    we be surprised that he chose to transcribe madrigals by
                    Marenzio for the keyboard. Philips worked as organist at
                    the English College, before meeting the English catholic
                    Thomas Paget, third Baron Paget, and entering his service
                    as a musician. He travelled with Paget to Spain and to Paris.
                    On Paget’s death in 1590, Philips moved to Antwerp, where
                    he made his living as a music teacher and as a music editor
                    for the publisher Pierre Phalèse. Most of his works for harpsichord – which
                    seem more ‘English’ and less ‘Italian’ in style than his
                    vocal works, both sacred and secular – probably belong to
                    the first part of his career.
                
                 
                
                
                While
                    still in London in 1580 he wrote a Pavan in G major, recorded
                    here, which became popular both in England and in Europe,
                    though it was never published in his lifetime. It is an attractive
                    piece, played here with dignified grace by Elizabeth Farr
                    on a fine instrument. It was built in Rome in 1658, probably
                    by Jerome de Zentis, and recently restored by Keith Hill
                    - see 
                    a fascinating account of the instrument and its restoration.
                    It exudes both charm and dignity, as played by Elizabeth
                    Farr and proves eminently suitable for the music of Philips,
                    with a rich bass and a sweet, clear upper register.
                
                 
                
                
                Elizabeth
                    Farr plays – and plays very well – a bout half of Philips’s
                    surviving keyboard works on this CD; one only regrets that
                    we don’t have a second CD on which the rest might have appeared.
                    She makes a very good case for Philips’s intabulations of
                    vocal works, bringing out the powerfully expressive nature
                    of much of Philips’s writing, without ever going ‘over the
                    top’, as it were. Her booklet notes confirm her perceptiveness,
                    being full of brief but suggestive observations on the music,
                    especially on the elements of word-painting in these intabulations – such
                    as those in “Le rossignol” and Striggio’s “Chi farà fed’al
                    cielo”. 
                
                 
                
                Every single one of the works recorded here is of interest
                    and all are intelligently (and adroitly) performed. The skillful
                    variations in the Passamezzo Pavan and Galliard, or the poignancy
                    of the Paget Pavan and Galliard in C minor (surely written
                    on the occasion of Paget’s death, as Elizabeth Farr suggests)
                    would each be sufficient on their own to make a case for
                    Philips. And that case has a persuasive advocate in the well
                    judged playing of Elizabeth Farr. I particularly like her
                    refusal to rush, allowing Philips’s expressive writing full
                    scope. There are other recordings of Philips’s work for harpsichord,
                    such as those by Anneke Uittenbosch (Etcetera 1022), Emer
                    Buckley (Harmonia Mundi HMC901263), Colin Booth (Soundboard
                    SBCD 992 - see review) and Paul Nicholson (Hyperion CDA
                    66734). Elizabeth Farr’s recording is on a par with the best
                    of them and, in any case, this isn’t music of which a single
                    recording can ever be ‘definitive’ to the exclusion of other
                    recordings, if only because of the great variety of possibilities,
                    of
                    different perspectives on the music, created by the use of
                    different instruments. 
                
                A lovely instrument, well-played, at the service of music which should
                    be far better known than it is.
                
                 
                    
                    Glyn Pursglove
                    
 
                
                
                
                
                
                
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