Sir John Tavener: Composer dies aged 69

Posted by: Paper Plane on 12 November 2013

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-24919332

 

steve

Posted on: 12 November 2013 by Kevin-W
Originally Posted by Paper Plane:

Blimey. He was only on Radio 4's "Start The Week" yesterday...

Posted on: 13 November 2013 by Richard Dane

The first time I heard a recording of The Lamb it gave me the goosebumps.  That day I drove to The Collectors Room in Salisbury and bought a couple of Tavener recordings including The Lamb, which for me remains one of the most hauntingly beautiful pieces ever composed.  Farewell John Tavener, youyr music will live on.

Posted on: 22 November 2013 by Komet

I came across 'The Whale' due to the connection with The Beatles. It's not bad, keep a copy in the car in case I get an opportunity to impress the sister-in-law. Below is a tribute courtesy of Apple Records:

 

Both John Lennon and Ringo Starr took an interest in John Tavener’s music.  His first major composition, the iconoclastic and ground-breaking The Whale, was premiered at the Proms in 1969 and was recorded by Apple Records the following year, followed by the release of the extraordinary Celtic Requiem, a piece for orchestra and children’s choir, in 1971.

Andy Davis wrote:

"John Tavener’s The Whale and Celtic Requiem are two of the most extraordinary records ever issued, certainly on Apple Records, and most likely on any mainstream label. A bold claim, perhaps. But listen first and then decide." 

John Tavener was very happy that Apple Records was supportive of his early works. "It was marvellously refreshing because serious music at that time was very humourless and narrow, and if recorded at all, therefore tended to be on very obscure labels. To have Apple take on The Whale and Celtic Requiem was wonderful."

John had two sponsors at Apple, John Lennon and Ringo Starr. He recalls meeting John Lennon and Yoko Ono at a dinner party one night, where they swapped tapes and exchanged ideas. And Ringo? "I met Ringo at my brother’s house," Sir John says. At that time, Roger Tavener ran the family’s up-market building firm and was renovating Ringo’s home in Highgate. Sir John adds: "My brother had prepared caviar, but Ringo just wanted a jam sandwich. We finally agreed to record The Whale at that meeting."

"Ringo came to all the rehearsals and the recordings of The Whale and Celtic Requiem," adds Sir John. Indeed, Ringo is one of those shouting through a loud hailer in ‘Melodrama & Pantomime’ on The Whale.

"John and Ringo were very important to me," Sir John admits. "They were lovely people. I don’t think I could actually call them friends but they were wonderful people to meet."

In 2000, John Tavener was knighted by the Queen for his services to music.  For him, music is not merely artistic expression. Instead, his belief in God and his desire to articulate his relationship with the divine is paramount. "God shows himself in everything that lives," he has said, "and this includes the sublime language of music."

"My life has taught me that music has a primordial origin," Sir John concludes today. "I can’t really explain it. I wanted to produce music that was the sound of God. That’s what I have always tried to do."

 

 

Posted on: 22 November 2013 by joerand

Interesting stuff, thanks for sharing that, Komet.