Music in Elizabethan court politics
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Music in Elizabethan court politics
(Studies in medieval and Renaissance music / general editors, Tess Knighton and Andrew Wathey, 14)
Boydell Press, 2015
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 223-246) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Music and musical entertainments are here shown to be used for different ends, by both monarch and courtiers.
Queen Elizabeth I (1558-1603) had a strong reputation for musicality; her court musicians, Thomas Tallis and William Byrd, even suggested that music was indispensable to the state. But what roles did music play in Elizabethan court politics? How did a musical image assist the Queen in projecting her royal authority? What influence did her private performances have on her courtships, diplomatic affairs, and relationships with courtiers? To what extent did Elizabeth control court music, or could others appropriate performances to enhance their own status and achieve their ambitions? Could noblemen, civic leaders, or even musicians take advantage of Elizabeth's love of music to present their complaints and petitions in song?
This book unravels the connotations surrounding Elizabeth's musical image and traces the political roles of music at the Elizabethan court. It scrutinizes the most intimate performances within the Privy Chamber, analyses the masques and plays performed in the palaces, and explores the grandest musical pageantry of tournaments, civic entries, and royal progresses. This reveals how music served as a valuable means for both the tactful influencing of policies and patronage, and the construction of political identities and relationships. In the late Tudor period music was simultaneously a tool of authority for the monarch and an instrumentof persuasion for the nobility.
KATHERINE BUTLER is a Senior Lecturer at Northumbria University, Newcastle.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Music, Authority, and the Royal Image
The Politics of Intimacy
The Royal Household and its Revels
Noble Masculinity at the Tournaments
Politics, Petition, and Complaint on the Royal Progresses
Conclusion
Appendices
Bibliography
by "Nielsen BookData"