The In Nomine of Christopher Tye: Understanding the Cultural Forces that Shaped Tye’s Secular Instrumental Musical Expression

Research Article by Chrissie Berryman and Anne-Marie Forbes

University of Tasmania

Context 50 (2024): 9–35

Published online: 7 Mar. 2025

Extract

Christopher Tye (c. 1500–1573) was a professional musician, organist, and cleric, whose contributions to church music during the Reformation subsequently earned him the accolade of ‘Father of the English Anthem.’ Tye wrote a significant body of abstract instrumental music, including twenty-one complete surviving In Nomine that date from the politically turbulent mid-sixteenth century. These works display extraordinary abstract creativity and musical competence. In the absence of new evidence however, the intricate cultural forces at play in mid-sixteenth-century England, coupled with fragmented historical records and biases in biographical accounts, obscure the precise cultural influences that shaped Tye’s secular music. While it is reasonable to assume that Tye’s professional context was shaped by the social upheaval of political disruptions and emerging religious doctrines, the extent to which these experiences influenced his artistic expression remains unknown.

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https://doi.org/10.46580/cx36220