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David Fanshawe
David Fanshawe
from Wikipedia

David Arthur Fanshawe (19 April 1942 – 5 July 2010) was an English composer and self-styled explorer with a fervent interest in world music.[1] His best-known composition is the 1972 choral work African Sanctus.

Key Information

Life

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Fanshawe was born in Paignton, Devon in 1942. His father was an officer in the Royal Artillery who played a central role in the planning of D-Day. His father's stories of military service in India fired Fanshawe's enthusiasm for travel and adventure. His first ambition was to be an explorer, but when he attended St George's School, Windsor Castle and Stowe School he discovered a love of music. His severe dyslexia, however, prevented him from reading a musical score and becoming a chorister.[1]

At Stowe School he spent much of his spare time learning to play the piano, and when he was 17 he was discovered by the mother of a school friend, a French baroness who tutored him in the piano even after he left the school in 1959. He started his adult career as a musician and film editor for a small production company in Wimbledon in London who made documentary films. In 1965 Fanshawe won a scholarship to the Royal College of Music, where he studied composition under John Lambert. During his holidays he continued to travel widely in Europe and the Middle East. During a summer spent hitchhiking in Iran he heard Islamic music for the first time and was immediately attracted to its beauty. During further travels in Iraq and Bahrain he recorded the traditional music he heard.[1]

On completing his studies in 1969, Fanshawe travelled up the Nile from the Mediterranean Sea, visiting Egypt, Sudan, Uganda and Kenya over a three-year period before finally reaching Lake Victoria. He brought a small stereo tape recorder on his journey and would persuade local musicians to play for him.[1] Returning to the United Kingdom in 1972 with several hundreds of hours of recordings made during his travels, Fanshawe used the material to compose what became his best known work, African Sanctus. The album was written and conceived with David's first wife, Judith Croasdell, in the 1970s in their first home at East Sheen, London, after many perilous trips to Africa together. After this work he became widely known for the composition of choral works. Besides vocal pieces, he also composed the score for films and television,[2] including films such as Tarka the Otter (1979) and Dirty Weekend (1993), and TV productions such as the BBC's Softly, Softly: Taskforce and When the Boat Comes In and also ITV's The Feathered Serpent, Flambards and The Good Companions. His ethnic field recordings have featured in countless TV documentaries, including Musical Mariner and Tropical Beat, as well as various feature films including Mountains of the Moon, How to Make an American Quilt, Seven Years in Tibet and Gangs of New York.[3][4]

During a ten-year odyssey across the islands of the Pacific Ocean begun in 1978, Fanshawe collected several thousand hours of indigenous music, and documented the music and oral traditions of Polynesia, Micronesia and Melanesia in journals and photographs. These pieces form the core of his collection, an archive of approximately 2,000 hours of ethnic music and 60,000 images. Pacific Song, a movement based on this material, premiered in Miami in 2007. This was the first completed section of Pacific Odyssey, a new choral work which Fanshawe conceived on a grander scale than African Sanctus. He did not complete the work by the time of his death.[1][5]

Fanshawe detailed his plans for Pacific Odyssey in an interview with Rory Johnston on Music Now on the BBC World Service, 15 January 1986. An extended version of this including Fanshawe’s recordings and a movement of an intermezzo is on You Tube.[6] Johnston also recorded a discussion in depth with Fanshawe about his life and work, approaching two and a half hours. This is in Johnston’s possession.

The University of the West of England awarded the honorary degree of Doctor of Music to Fanshawe in 2007 for his pursuit of musical excellence and for introducing music into lives of people who could neither read nor write music.[7] Fanshawe also earned a Churchill Fellowship and a nomination for an Ivor Novello Award for the recording of African Sanctus.[1]

Personal life

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Fanshawe married Judith Croasdell Grant in 1971; they had two children together, Alexander and Rebecca. The marriage was dissolved in 1985. He married his second wife, Jane in 1985, with whom he had a daughter, Rachel. His younger brother is James, a former naval officer.

He lived near Ramsbury, Wiltshire in England. He died on 5 July 2010 from a stroke.[8]

Selected works

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  • African Sanctus, a work for soprano, alto, tenor and bass choir, soloists, percussion and tapes
    • from which "The Lord's Prayer" is also performed separately
  • Spirit of African Sanctus (source tapes from above)
  • Softly, Softly: Taskforce - television theme
  • The Feathered Serpent – television score
  • When the Boat Comes In – television score
  • Flambards – television score
  • The Good Companions - television score
  • Tarka the Otter - film score
  • Dirty Weekend - film score
  • Dona Nobis Pacem – A Hymn for World Peace
  • Dover Castle
  • Requiem for the Children of Aberfan
  • The Awakening for cello or viola and piano
  • Planet Earth – Fanfare and March
  • Serenata
  • Pacific Song – Chants from the Kingdom of Tonga
  • Musical Mariner: Pacific Journey (from the PBS Television series Adventure)

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
David Fanshawe was a British composer and ethnomusicologist known for his pioneering field recordings of traditional music from Africa, the Middle East, and the Pacific, as well as for fusing these sounds with Western classical forms in his most celebrated work, African Sanctus. His travels and compositions helped preserve endangered musical traditions while promoting the idea of music as a universal language bridging cultures. Born on 19 April 1942 in Paignton, Devon, England, during an air raid, Fanshawe was educated at St George's Choir School, Windsor, and Stowe School before winning a scholarship to the Royal College of Music in 1965, where he studied composition with John Lambert. After early work as a film editor and sound recordist, he began traveling in the 1960s to capture indigenous music, starting in the Middle East and then embarking on an extensive journey down the Nile and across Africa between 1969 and 1975, during which he recorded hundreds of hours of traditional performances from diverse communities. These recordings directly inspired African Sanctus (1972), along with earlier pieces such as Salaams (1970) and Arabian Fantasy (1976), and he also composed over 50 film and television scores during the 1970s, including for Tarka the Otter. In 1978 Fanshawe turned his attention to the Pacific, based at the University of the South Pacific in Fiji starting in 1978 for over a decade to document music across more than 25 nations, resulting in the Fanshawe World Music Archive, which has been recognized for its immense cultural significance. Later works included Pacific Odyssey (a large-scale project left incomplete, with one movement performed in 2007) and others drawn from this research, while he continued giving illustrated lectures worldwide and digitizing his extensive collection after returning to England in 1992. He received numerous honors, including a Churchill Fellowship and an honorary doctorate from the University of the West of England in 2009. Fanshawe died on 5 July 2010 after a stroke, remembered for his adventurous spirit and contributions to world music preservation and cross-cultural composition.

Early life and education

Childhood and early influences

David Fanshawe was born on 19 April 1942 in Paignton, Devon, England. He was the son of a British artillery officer whose foreign postings included India, an experience that introduced him to ideas of the exotic wider world from an early age. As a six-year-old, he expressed ambitions to become an explorer, inspired by his father's military career and travels. Fanshawe received his early education as a chorister at St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle, attending St George's Choir School in Windsor. He later studied at Stowe School in Buckinghamshire. His musical talent became evident during his time at Stowe, where a friend's mother, the composer Guirne Creith, recognized his potential. After leaving school in 1959, he began private piano lessons with her.

Musical education and early career

After leaving school in 1959, David Fanshawe began his professional career as a trainee film editor and sound recordist, initially at the Film Producers Guild and later at Merton Park Studios, where he developed his technical skills in documentary production over several years. During this time he also took piano lessons with composer and pianist Guirne Creith, who recognized his greater promise as a composer and encouraged his creative development. In 1965 Fanshawe was awarded a Foundation Scholarship to the Royal College of Music on the strength of performing his own compositions, where he studied composition under John Lambert. Despite significant struggles with formal musical theory—he once walked out of a harmony examination after being unable to begin the paper, leaving an apologetic note for the examiners—the scholarship was granted, an outcome that surprised him. His early orchestral works included Dover Castle and Requiem for the Children of Aberfan, the latter receiving its premiere performance by the Royal College of Music orchestra conducted by Harvey Phillips. During his studies Fanshawe's exposure to varied musical traditions fostered a growing interest in world music that would shape his subsequent career.

Ethnomusicological expeditions

African travels and recordings

David Fanshawe began his field recording work in 1967 with recordings of pearl divers in Bahrain, marking his initial foray into capturing indigenous music traditions and later inspiring the composition Salaams. Between 1969 and 1975, he undertook extensive travels through North and East Africa, progressing up the Nile from the Mediterranean to Lake Victoria while documenting traditional music in remote areas of Egypt, Sudan, Uganda, and Kenya. These expeditions resulted in over 400 hours of recordings of indigenous music, preserving performances that captured the cultural expressions of local communities. The early phase of this work received support from the Ralph Vaughan Williams Trust, which funded his efforts to document music in these regions. In 1972, with additional support from a Churchill Fellowship, Fanshawe and his then-wife continued recording but encountered difficulties in Tanzania, where they were refused permission to record yet were caught capturing the sukuma drums of a local king; authorities strip-searched them, held them imprisoned for two days, and declared them persona non grata before they returned to Kenya. The following year, in 1973, he conducted photography and recording work in Masai Land, Kenya, further contributing to his documentation of East African traditions. These African field recordings formed the basis for African Sanctus.

Pacific and Asian travels

In 1978, David Fanshawe shifted his focus from Africa to the Pacific, making his first visit to Fiji where he based himself at the University of the South Pacific. From there, he embarked on a ten-year voyage of research and recording, documenting traditional music across more than 25 nations spanning Polynesia, Micronesia, and Melanesia. These expeditions captured endangered musical traditions amid vast oceanic distances and challenging logistics, resulting in an extensive collection of field recordings, photographs, and journals that preserved cultural expressions at risk of disappearance. During this period, Fanshawe undertook targeted trips including recordings in the Cook Islands in 1982, Papua New Guinea in 1985, and French Polynesia in 1986, among others. His Pacific work, spanning 1978 to 1989 with some additional activity in 1994, contributed significantly to the broader Fanshawe World Music Archive, which totals approximately 3,200 stereo master tapes of indigenous music, 40,000 colour slides, and 70 hand-written journals. This archive, encompassing his global efforts, has been instrumental in safeguarding traditional music-making across the Pacific region. Following his return to England from Australia in 1992, Fanshawe made one further journey through the tropics of South East Asia to record traditional music in India, Thailand, and Laos. These recordings formed part of the documentary film Tropical Beat produced by Eclectic Films.

Compositions

African Sanctus

African Sanctus is a visionary choral work by David Fanshawe that combines authentic African field recordings with a setting of the Latin Mass, creating a pioneering fusion of taped ethnic music in counterpoint with live SATB chorus, soprano soloist, and instrumental ensemble. The composition draws on recordings made during his 1969–1973 journey up the Nile, integrating traditional songs and sounds from various African tribes with Western choral elements to express unity across peoples, faiths, and musical traditions. Fanshawe conceived the piece as a celebratory statement of "One Music - One God," emphasizing a shared spiritual truth beyond cultural and religious boundaries. African Sanctus premiered in 1972 in London and was first heard as a groundbreaking marriage of live performance and tape. It gained widespread recognition through a 1975 BBC Omnibus documentary that explored its creation and cultural significance, followed by a popular LP recording that achieved bestseller status. The work introduced sampling techniques to choral music by using pre-recorded African field sounds alongside live singers and players, blending ethnic, popular, and classical influences in an innovative way. In 1994, a revised version of African Sanctus was released, incorporating the addition of Dona Nobis Pacem, a hymn for world peace, as featured on the premiere recording of that movement. The piece has received close to two thousand live performances across more than thirty countries on five continents, establishing it as a staple in the international choral repertoire. Its enduring appeal lies in its message of cross-cultural harmony and its innovative approach to combining diverse musical worlds.

Other compositions

David Fanshawe produced a range of compositions beyond his best-known work African Sanctus, often drawing on global musical traditions and commissions. His early piece Salaams premiered in 1970 at the Queen Elizabeth Hall, incorporating Bahraini chants as its foundation. Arabian Fantasy, an eclectic collection of symphonic variations on an Arabian theme commissioned by Naim Attallah, premiered in 1976 at the Royal Albert Hall and served as a spiritual response to Middle Eastern influences. Later works include The Awakening, an intermezzo for cello and piano commissioned by Steven Isserlis and recorded in 1986. Pacific Song, composed for chorus, flute, and percussion, premiered in Miami in 2007. Additional compositions encompass the revised Tarka the Otter Symphonic Suite, Fanfare to Planet Earth, Millennium March, Serenata, Trafalgar, and Lament of the Seas. Fanshawe also began Pacific Odyssey as an ambitious intended project that remained unfinished at his death.

Film and television work

Personal life

David Fanshawe married Judith Croasdell Grant in 1971, with whom he had two children, Alexander and Rebecca. The marriage ended in divorce in 1985. In 1985, he married Jane Bishop, with whom he had one daughter, Rachel.

Death and legacy

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