Book description
In the chaos of the English Civil War and Puritan Commonwealth,
churches were defaced and organs broken, but the tradition of fine
music survived. When Charles II returned from exile in 1660, one of
the first things he demanded was music, sacred and profane, anthems
and motets, pavannes and gavottes. In 1659 Henry Purcell was born, and
his genius would give the period and nation an unforgettable voice.
Jonathan Keates traces Purcell's development against the turbulent
movements of his time - political, religious, theatrical and social.
He shows him growing up in the shadow of Westminster Abbey and follows
him as a chorister in the Chapel Royal, copying the innovative and
colourful style of Matthew Locke; beginning to composer for the
theatre, and for State occasions; writing his great settings of sacred
music, his chamber sonatas, and his triumphant Dido and Aeneas, the
first British opera. In the background are the heady politics of
Restoration England, which expelled the Stuart James II and brought
William and Mary to the throne. But almost more important is the rich
musical history, the influence of French and Italian composers,
blending with and modifying the native tradition. We know and love
Purcell through his work; his songs were sung in taverns, his psalms
in churches; he was urbane and witty, impassioned and profound. This
engrossing biography is as remarkable for its sensitive critical
appreciation of Purcell's music, in all its forms, as it is for its
vivid portrait of the man, and the boisterous age in which he lived.