The Scotsman

Oliver Knussen

Glasgow-born composer and conductor

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Stuart Oliver Knussen CBE, composer and conductor. Born: 12 June 1952 in Glasgow. Died: 8 July 2018 in Snape, England, aged 66.

British composer Oliver Knussen – who leapt to fame at 15 conducting the London Symphony Orchestra in his First Symphony, created a wild rumpus of an opera out of Maurice Sendak’s Where the Wild Things Are and championed contempora­ry composers as a conductor and mentor – has died at 66.

His death was announced by his publisher, Faber Music. The company did not specify a cause, but Knussen had battled health problems for years.

Knussen was among the most influentia­l British composers of his generation. His output was not huge – he became known for composing slowly, and missing deadlines – but he leaves behind a catalogue of finely wrought works that, while rooted in 20th-century modernism, are beholden to no school but his own.

Many are miniatures or small of scale; even his Symphony No. 3, one of his most acclaimed works for full orchestra, clocks in at a swift 15 minutes. But they are intricate, and densely packed with rich detail: music from concentrat­e.

His influence extended far beyond his own pieces. He was a respected conductor who mentored and championed composers, including during stints as artistic director of the Aldeburgh Festival, and as head of contempora­ry music at the Tanglewood Music Centre, the summer academy of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, from 1986 to 1993.

“He has had a fertilisin­g and energising effect on the whole of British music for the last 40 years,” composer George Benjamin, a longtime friend and colleague, said. “We have a lively and varied contempora­ry music world here in the UK, and a lot of it is owed to him, because of the immensely generous encouragem­ent he gave to generation­s and generation­s of composers.”

Stuart Oliver Knussen was born into a musical family in Glasgow. His father, Stuart, was the principal double bass of the London Symphony, giving Knussen access as a boy to many of the leading figures in the British music world, including eminent

composer Benjamin Britten. “He invited me to tea – of course, I was terribly shy – and treated me seriously,” Knussen recalled of Britten in an interview with the Guardian in 2012. “Was I doing counterpoi­nt? Did I plan my pieces carefully? That kind of thing. He was very good at making you feel what you were doing was important, and as if you might be having the same sort of problems he had.”

It was through his father that Knussen got his big break: the London Symphony’s performanc­e of his Symphony No. 1 in 1968. He was not originally scheduled to conduct the piece, but he stepped in when the scheduled conductor, Istvan Kertesz, fell ill. His achievemen­t drew headlines around the world and made him an overnight sensation.

“I don’t like all this prodigy rubbish,” he said at the time. “I just started early.”

His precocious success, he later decided, was a doubleedge­d sword. “It became a nine-day wonder – press photograph­ers on the doorstep next morning and all that,” he recalled. He withdrew from the limelight and went to Tanglewood to work on his craft, and to study with composer Gunther Schuller.

Knussen’s style was eclectic but precise. Some works, like Hums and Songs of Winnie-the-pooh, for soprano and chamber ensemble, were whimsical. Others were weighty; his Second Symphony was a song cycle to texts by Georg Trakl and Sylvia Plath. Some subjects he returned to over the years: Decades after writing Ophelia Dances (1975), a Schumannes­que ensemble piece, he refashione­d an unused melody into the piano work “Ophelia’s Last Dance” (2010). As he grew older he developed a reputation for perfection­ism that sometimes

meant he did not deliver commission­s on time. “A piece wants to be what it wants to be, and the few times I’ve forced it to be something else to meet a deadline, I’ve regretted it,” he said.

One of his most beloved works was Where the Wild Things Are, which he continued revising after its premiere in 1980 and which he paired with a subsequent opera also based on Sendak, Higglety Pigglety Pop! The diptych originated with a phone call from Sendak that began with a question. Sendak asked, “Can we just start by me asking you what you think is the best children’s opera ever written?”

“I said, ‘The second act of Boris Godunov’,” Knussen recalled, eschewing the usual kiddie fare for Mussorgsky’s epic of intrigue and murder. “He said, ‘Right answer,’ and from that point on we became very close.”

Just as Britten had taken Knussen seriously when he was young, he became a dedicated mentor to young composers. Mark-anthony Turnage, composer of the opera Anna Nicole, said Knussen had given him muchneeded confidence. “The teachers I had after him were a huge disappoint­ment,” Turnage recalled, “because he was so thorough.”

Knussen is survived by a daughter, Sonya, a mezzosopra­no, and a brother, Kenneth. His wife, Sue Knussen, a musician and director, died in 2003; they had separated but remained close. He wrote Requiem – Songs for Sue for her in 2006, after he had been hospitalis­ed for what was described in the news media as an unspecifie­d “major illness”.

MICHAEL COOPER

 ??  ?? 0 Oliver Knussen works at the piano in 1967, at the age of 15
0 Oliver Knussen works at the piano in 1967, at the age of 15

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