Jeremy Noble was born on 27 March 1930 in London. His father James Noble was the son of South African missionaries, while his mother Avis "came from Cornish farming stock". After attending the
Aldenham School, Jeremy Noble had a brief stint in the Intelligence Corps of
Allied-occupied Austria. He read
Greats at the
Worcester College of the
University of Oxford from 1949 to 1953. Noble developed an interest in music during university and published a series of essays on the
English Renaissance and
Baroque music during the 1950s. In the former topic he studied British music theorists active from 1100 to 1700 and English church music from 1400 to the
English Reformation. His interests gradually broadened to also include 16th and 17th-century
Venetian music and particularly the life and work of
Josquin des Prez. In researching Josquin's biography, he conducted substantial archival research and later served on the editorial board for the
New Josquin Edition which began publication in 1994. Noble wrote the music section of Josquin's
Grove Music Online (formerly in
The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians) article, and cowrote the chapter on Josquin with
Gustave Reese in
The New Grove High Renaissance Masters. Though he published little, his
The Telegraph obituary noted that "anyone working in the field of Renaissance music was in his debt for the groundbreaking work he did in the field, and aware of his vast corpus of research notes which, if put in order, would fill several volumes". The musicologist
Stanley Sadie commented that "the breadth and depth of his knowledge and his generosity towards fellow scholars have made him an important participant in late 20th-century musicology". From the 1950s onwards Noble engaged in a
music criticism career alongside his musicological scholarship. He first began writing for
Gramophone and speaking for the
BBC Third Programme, with a "melodious and refined voice that was one of his most attractive characteristics". He became a critic for
The Times in 1960, alongside
William Mann and
Andrew Porter for colleagues. He paused music criticism to take two research fellowships, first
Birmingham University (1963–1966) and then
University at Buffalo (UB; 1966 onwards), during which he was a Fellow of the Harvard Institute for Renaissance Studies (1967–1968). After another criticism post at
The Sunday Telegraph (1972–1976), Noble returned to UB in 1976 until his retirement in 1995 and returned to London. He died on 30 June 2017. Noble was gay and kept a private personal life, having no long-term partner.
The Telegraph described him as "loyal and kind, a stout believer in
Enlightenment values and
Western civilisation in general. He was convinced that anyone could share in those values, given a little patience and goodwill." ==Selected writings==