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‘He kept his pixie sparkle to the end’. Peter Maxwell Davies
‘He kept his pixie sparkle to the end’. Peter Maxwell Davies. Photograph: REX/Shutterstock
‘He kept his pixie sparkle to the end’. Peter Maxwell Davies. Photograph: REX/Shutterstock

Simon Rattle on Maxwell Davies: 'He was a hero to me'

This article is more than 8 years old
Simon Rattle

The conductor pays tribute to the composer who died earlier this week, and reveals the surprising extent of his influence on the teenage Simon

It is clear to everyone that we have lost a wonderful composer and one of our most important artistic figures, a man who embodied music, and who wanted it to be part of everybody’s life, from the youngest to the oldest. He wrote for every possible type of ability, from some of the thorniest orchestral scores of their time to music for young people that was as practical as it is irresistible. It is now a sad irony that the LSO were responsible for his last two large-scale works; one was the powerful 10th symphony, which he was well enough to hear in London in 2014; his last piece, The Hogboon, we will premiere in June. Fittingly, it is designed to be performed by children, amateur singers and professionals, and it looks like an instant classic on the page. He was certainly very proud of it, and was impatient to hear it.

Personally he was a hero for me from childhood onwards; as a young teen my parents used to curse him, as I had read that he loved purple and I was therefore unwilling to wear any other colour. Some of the first music I conducted were his chamber pieces: Seven in Nomine and Antichrist. When the Philharmonia asked me to premiere his first symphony in 1978, I felt as though all my Christmases had arrived at once, and I will never forget the thrill of sitting down in his publisher’s office and reading through the score, feeling the visceral power leaping out of the page. His thank you present was typically thoughtful; “Simon”, he said, “I think your life will be improved by a taste for good wine. I will send you 24 half bottles, 12 pairs of my favourite wines, and you can see what appeals to you. Don’t forget what you are tasting!”

Simon Rattle and Peter Maxwell Davies photographed in 1981 ahead of the world premiere of Max’s Black Pentecost. Photograph: Ian Tyas/Getty Images

This desire to share pleasure and knowledge was also maybe the key to his music, so often written for friends, or with specific people in mind. His political activity too was always designed to remind people that music was for everyone and could never be taken for granted - a view he promulgated with passion and sometimes acid wit. He kept his pixie sparkle to the end, and the unwavering intensity of his eyes will remain forever with all of us who knew and loved him.

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