Sir John Tavener

British composer
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Quick Facts
Born:
January 28, 1944, London, England
Died:
November 12, 2013, Child Okeford, Dorset (aged 69)
Awards And Honors:
Grammy Award (2002)
Notable Works:
“The Whale”

Sir John Tavener (born January 28, 1944, London, England—died November 12, 2013, Child Okeford, Dorset) was a British composer who was strongly influenced by sacred and spiritual texts. Although some critics dismissed his work as lightweight, Tavener drew praise for making classical music accessible to the masses.

Tavener composed music as early as age three and learned to play the piano and organ. He attended the Royal Academy of Music in London, where his instructors included the composers David Lumsdaine and Sir Lennox Berkeley. Tavener made his first significant mark with The Whale, an avant-garde cantata that received a popular debut at the London Sinfonietta in 1968. His music drew from Russian, Byzantine, and Greek influences and became more inwardly focused after he joined the Russian Orthodox church in 1977. At age 36 Tavener suffered a stroke, and in 1991 he was diagnosed with Marfan syndrome, a genetic disorder affecting the connective tissues. Acknowledging that these events strengthened his commitment to his faith and to expressing it through music, Tavener likened composing to prayer and described himself as more of a conduit to the spiritual world than a composer. His spiritual mentor, an abbess at an Orthodox monastery in North Yorkshire, was also his librettist.

Significant Tavener works during the 1980s and ’90s included Orthodox Vigil Service, Akathist of Thanksgiving, The Protecting Veil, the large-scale choral piece Resurrection, and the opera Mary of Egypt. Tavener’s Song for Athene was played during the 1997 funeral of Diana, princess of Wales, and his choral composition A New Beginning was premiered as part of the celebration in London’s Millennium Dome to welcome the year 2000. Tavener was knighted in 2000.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.