The Sunday Post (Inverness)

‘A true defender of faith’

Composer hails the Queen after writing music for her funeral

- By Murray Scougall mscougall@sundaypost.com

Written quickly but not in haste, it was placed in a drawer but not forgotten.

The choral score would remain there for 10 years but, on Monday, would be heard for the first time in Westminste­r Abbey where 2,000 mourners gathered at the Queen’s funeral while billions more watched around the world.

Now composer Sir James Macmillan has told how he wrote Who Shall Separate Us? in 2012 after being quietly approached to compose a piece for the occasion the year before.

“My first conversati­ons, which were very secretive, took place in Westminste­r Abbey in 2011,” he said. “The text was suggested, and it was one of Queen Elizabeth’s favourite scriptural passages. It probably came directly from the importance of the text, which gets right to the heart of her own religious feelings and relationsh­ip with Jesus.

“I wrote it quickly and delivered it to my publishers, who got the material to the Abbey and it was shoved in a drawer until rehearsals began two weeks ago. While it was a sad occasion, I felt elated that I was able to contribute something.”

His piece, founded on the New Testament texts from St Paul’s Epistle To The Romans, speaks of the spiritual power of Christ’s love to transcend all barriers.

Its lyrics read: “Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principali­ties, nor powers, nothing present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Jesus Christ our Lord. Alleluia. Amen.”

Macmillan continued: “The incredible thing about Queen Elizabeth is the way she was able to talk about these sometimes very personal things in her public broadcasts in an honest and down-to-earth way, which seemed to communicat­e a simple but effective and profound faith to lots of people – not just in the UK but in the world – some of whom would share her faith, many of whom would not, yet she did it so effectivel­y that people were drawn in to what she was saying.

“So, in that way, she was a true defender of faith and lots of people of different religions were encouraged that she was on our side, standing up for us.

“People say to me, ‘How do you feel about the head of the Anglican church?’ being a Catholic myself but, to be honest, most Catholics in the UK are amongst her greatest supporters because they saw in her words that she was a great friend and supporter of who we are, and she brought people of different denominati­ons more and more together because of that. It’s that religious centrality of her life and work, and message and example, that meant so much to me.”

While he had played the arrangemen­t on the piano, he only heard Who Shall Separate Us? performed for the first time during the funeral service.

“I wasn’t able to get to London as this is a busy time for me,” he said. “I had the opportunit­y but was delighted to give my place to someone more deserving. It meant I heard it for the first time while watching it on the telly.” Two pieces of Macmillan’s work were also used during the St Giles’ Cathedral service in Edinburgh a few days earlier.

Macmillan, who received his knighthood from the Duke of Cambridge in 2015 for services to music, is one of the world’s great living composers and had the opportunit­y to be in the Queen’s company on two occasions.

“The first time was at Buckingham Palace and it was for the 75th birthday party of the great Russian cellist, Mstislav Rostropovi­ch. I was there because I’d written a cellist concerto for Rostropovi­ch a few years earlier,” he recalled.

“The London Symphony Orchestra played a short concert before dinner and I got talking to the musicians and missed the memo that guests should be making their way into the dining space. At that point, the orchestra was ushered out another door and I found myself alone in this room, just myself and the royal family, with all these servant-types glaring at me.

“Before I could do anything, two big doors opened and I could see the rest of the guests where I should have been, standing as the royal family processed into this space. There was only one thing I could do and that was to join on at the end, channellin­g my inner Mr Bean.

“When I got to my table, all the other guests were looking at me in astonishme­nt. At my table was the Polish composer Krzysztof Penderecki, Shostakovi­ch’s widow and Prince Michael of Kent. There was also a place set next to me for Baroness Thatcher, but she didn’t turn up. It was that kind of gathering and I made an absolute idiot of myself in front of them all.

“The second meeting was during the Papal visit, when I met the Queen and the Pope within minutes of each other at Holyrood, during that incredible, historical event in 2010.”

Macmillan – whose second violin concerto, dedicated to and performed by Nicola Benedetti alongside the Scottish Chamber Orchestra, will premiere in Perth, Edinburgh and Glasgow this week – said he looked forward to hearing Who Shall Separate Us? performed again.

“My publishers have expedited publicatio­n of it,” he added. “They think there will be a lot of interest in it from choirs around the world. It’s not too difficult

– it’s a piece a good amateur choir could do, as well as the profession­al ensembles. I look forward to hearing others taking it up, especially Scottish choirs.”

 ?? ?? The coffin of Queen Elizabeth is carried from Westminste­r Abbey after her funeral service on Monday when Sir James Macmillan’s Who Shall Separate Us? was heard for the first time
The coffin of Queen Elizabeth is carried from Westminste­r Abbey after her funeral service on Monday when Sir James Macmillan’s Who Shall Separate Us? was heard for the first time
 ?? ?? Sir James Macmillan
Sir James Macmillan

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