
Thomas Campion’s (1567-1620) haunting text, Parry eschews the dramatic style
Never weather-beaten sail more willing bent to shore.
O come quickly, sweetest Lord, and take my soul to rest!
Ever blooming are the joys of Heaven's high Paradise.
Cold age deafs not there our ears nor vapour dims our eyes:
Glory there the sun outshines whose beams the blessed only see:
O come quickly, glorious Lord, and raise my sprite to thee!
– Filipe de Magalhães (1571-1652)
in Azeitão, a small village in southwest Portugal. He studied music at the cloister
school of the Cathedral of Évora with Manuel Mendes where he was a colleague
of the equally renowned polyphonists Duarte Lobo and Manuel Cardoso. In 1589,
Magalhães replaced Mendes as mestre do Claustro da Sé (Master of the Cloister of
the Cathedral). By the early 17th century, Magalhães left Évora for Lisbon, where
he became a member of the Royal Chapel choir, eventually serving as Mestre
de Capela da Misericórdia. In 1623 he was appointed mestre da Capela Real, a
position he retained until his retirement in 1641. Magalhães dedicated his musical
life to the composition of sacred polyphonic works for the liturgy; most of them
were published in his two major collections, the Liber Missarum and the Cantica
Beatissima Virgines. Aside from these two publications, however, little of Magalhães’
music has survived, as most was lost during the 1755 Lisbon earthquake.
His Missa O Soberana Luz (O Sovereign Light), the title of which is a possible
reference to King Philip III of Portugal (who, because of the convoluted Habsburg
succession, was at the same time King Philip IV of Spain), was included in Magalhães’
several movements of the mass are identical with the plainsong Missa Cum jubilo
this is a parody mass derived from some other composition, since the opening
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