Performance

Monthly Listeners

Current

Followers

Current

Streams

Current

Tracks

Current

Popularity

Current

Top Releases

View All

Advent at Merton

344.7K streams

344,680

The Merton Collection: Merton at 750

171.7K streams

171,659

In the Beginning

121.7K streams

121,704

Viri Galilaei: Favourite Anthems from ...

52.1K streams

52,099

The Marian Collection

48.3K streams

48,330

Lassus: Missa ad imitationem moduli Vi...

21.9K streams

21,927

Carlo Gesualdo - Tenebrae Responsories...

Western Wind Masses (Taverner - Tye - ...

Thomas Tallis - Spem in Alium

The Tallis Scholars Sing William Byrd

Biography

Peter Phillips has dedicated his career to the research and performance of Renaissance polyphony, and to the perfecting of choral sound. He founded The Tallis Scholars in 1973, with whom he has now appeared in nearly 2,500 concerts worldwide and made over 60 albums. As a result of this commitment Peter Phillips and The Tallis Scholars have done more than any other group to establish the sacred vocal music of the Renaissance as one of the great repertoires of Western classical music. Peter Phillips also conducts other specialist ensembles. He is currently working with the BBC Singers, the Netherlands Chamber Choir, the Estonian Philharmonic Chamber Choir, Intrada (Moscow) and El Leon de Oro (Spain). He is Patron of the Chapel Choir of Merton College Oxford. In addition to conducting, Peter Phillips is well-known as a writer. For 33 years he contributed a regular music column to The Spectator. In 1995 he became the publisher of The Musical Times, the oldest continuously published music journal in the world. During 2018, BBC Radio 3 broadcast his view of Renaissance polyphony, in a series of six hour-long programmes, entitled The Glories of Polyphony. In 2005 Peter Phillips was made a Chevalier de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French Minister of Culture. In 2008 Peter helped to found the chapel choir of Merton College Oxford, where he is a Bodley Fellow; and in 2021 he was elected an Honorary Fellow of St John’s College, Oxford.