|
Tavener dedicated his book "The Music Of Silence: A Composer's Testament" (1999) to Mother Thekla. She "helped me put my music and my life together," he said. Their relationship was severed in the early years of the 21st century as Tavener's interests spread beyond Orthodoxy to embrace the insights of other traditions. She died in 2011. His marriage in 1974 to Victoria Maragopoulou, a dancer, effectively ended after eight months, though they formally divorced only a decade later on grounds of non-consummation
-- which Tavener later said was not true. Tavener suffered many health problems. "Almost every piece I write is, in a sense, kind of viewing death in different lights," he once said. He had the genetic disorder Marfan syndrome, suffered a stroke at 30, and in 1991 had difficult surgery for a leaking aortic valve. He was supported in his recovery by Maryanna Schaefer, who jolted him out of his self-absorption and later in 1991 became his wife. "After that I thought, what is this whole thing about my precious art? I can't do this, I can't have children, I can't that and I can't do the other thing because of my precious art," Tavener said in an interview for "A Portrait," a Naxos recoding. "Suddenly I thought, right, away with all this, this is total nonsense. This is living in the most ridiculously self-centered, arrogant way. Of course I can have children." The couple had two daughters, Theodora and Sofia, and a son, Orlando, who survive him. Tavener ranged widely in geography and spirituality in his pursuit of what he described as innocence. "I hear it in Sufi music with the nay flute. I see it in Coptic icons, in most traditional art, particularly art of the American Indian. I find the texts extraordinarily beautiful and very childlike and very simple," he said in an interview with Beliefnet. "The Veil of the Temple" (2002), a seven-hour work to be performed overnight, was an attempt "to remove the veils that hide the same basic truth of all authentic religions." "It begins for instance in the words of the Sufis, and ends in the Hindu world, with the Upanishad Hymn," he wrote in a program note. "The
'Logos', that mysterious substance inside the Godhead, reveals itself in many forms, whether it be Christ, Krishna, or
'the word made book' in the form of the Quran." Many of Tavener's solo parts were written for the Indian-born soprano Patricia Rozario. He was drawn, he said, to "the ecstatic quality of her voice." He found something like that in the "savage, untamed quality" in the voice of Bjork, the Icelandic pop star for whom he wrote "Prayer of the Heart" (2004). She also introduced him to an Apache medicine man, an encounter which Tavener said provoked a vision that night that "all traditions lead to the center, which is God." Tavener, whose work was championed by Prince Charles, received a knighthood from Queen Elizabeth II in 2000 for services to music. "He was an extraordinary British composer whose music will stand for some time," said Daniel Jaffe, reviews editor at the BBC Music Magazine.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.