Peter Phillips and The Tallis Scholars celebrate Arvo Pärt's 80th year with a new album of his finest a cappella works and a world tour.
“It is with great pleasure that we present our tribute to Arvo Pärt in his 80th year. Tintinnabuli (from the Latin for ‘bell’) is the compositional style created by Arvo Pärt which informs every work on this recording. In all my searchings for inspiring contemporary music I have not come across anyone to rival him.” Peter Phillips
Tintinnabuli was identified by Arvo Pärt as a compositional method in 1976, since when he has made it his own. In origin it derives from the sounds which bells emit when they are struck – a confusion of fundaments and overtones. When Pärt suffered a kind of writer's block between 1968 and 1976 he increasingly turned to early music, to the monastic lifestyle and to choral-writing. The sound of bells, so closely associated with early music, helped him and ultimately led to the inspiring sound-world of Tintinnabuli where simple diatonic melodies are set against harmonies based entirely on the natural harmonics of bells.
Peter Phillips believes that no music being written today makes a more satisfying match with renaissance polyphony than the sacred works of Arvo Pärt. In recent years he has regularly added works by Pärt to The Tallis Scholars' concert programmes, ever more convinced that his music was providing an important new perspective to the work of the older masters.
In time this conviction led to The Tallis Scholars' desire to make a recording of Pärt's a cappella compositions with the added novelty that all the works are sung in the way The Tallis Scholars sing renaissance music; with two voices to each part. It is Peter Phillips' belief that the clarity which results from this intimate scoring benefits Pärt's writing as much as it benefits that of Tallis and Palestrina.