Main content
Sorry, this episode is not currently available

Back to the Future

From plainchant to foxtrots, Donald Macleod explores how Peter Maxwell Davies delved into the past for musical inspiration that shocked 1960s audiences.

´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio 3 explores the music of Peter Maxwell Davies, who died a year ago this week at the age of 81. The contribution this former Master of the Queen's Music had made to the musical life of these islands as a hugely prolific composer, performer and teacher, is incalculable. Born in Salford in the 1930s, one of the composer's first musical memories was listening to foxtrot records under his parents' staircase as the bombs were falling during the Second World War. In the 1960s he was considered the 'enfant terrible' of new British music, writing the soundtrack for Ken Russell's controversial film 'The Devils' and even provoking an audience walk-out during the ´óÏó´«Ã½ Proms. However his music and life was to change as he came under the spell of the desolate Orkney islands, which he first visited in the early 1970s before moving there a few years later for the rest of his life.

In 1953 Peter Maxwell Davies went to Manchester University to study music. The Professor of Composition had two pieces of advice for the budding composer - 'don't listen to anything before 1550' and 'no music after Delius is worth bothering with'. It was advice that Maxwell Davies pointedly ignored as he pored over volumes of Tudor sacred music as well as studying the latest avant-garde techniques in Europe. From the sad incarceration of George III to the story of Tudor composer John Taverner, Donald Macleod takes a look at how Maxwell Davies' modern treatment of historical subjects and musical forms both enchanted and enraged 1960s concert-goers.

Suite from The Devils, Sister Jeanne's Vision
Aquarius
Nicholas Cleobury, conductor

Five Pieces for Piano, Op.2
John Ogdon, piano

Points and Dances from Act 2 of Taverner
The Fires of London
Peter Maxwell Davies, conductor

Pavans 1 and 2 from Fantasia and Two Pavans
The Fires of London
Peter Maxwell Davies, conductor

Eight Songs for a Mad King (excerpts)
Julius Eastman (singer)
The Fires of London
Peter Maxwell Davies, conductor

Worldes Blis (sixth movement)
Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.

1 hour

Music Played

  • Peter Maxwell Davies

    The Devils - Sister Jeanne's vision

    Conductor: Nicholas Cleobury. Orchestra: Aquarius.
    • COLLINS CLASSICS : 10952-.
    • COLLINS CLASSICS.
    • 10.
  • Peter Maxwell Davies

    Five Pieces for Piano op 2

    Performer: John Ogdon.
    • EMI : ASD 645-.
    • EMI.
    • 3.
  • Peter Maxwell Davies

    Taverner, Points and Dances Act 2

    Ensemble: The Fires of London. Conductor: Peter Maxwell Davies.
    • UNIVERSAL : 473721-2.
    • UNIVERSAL.
    • 1.
  • Peter Maxwell Davies

    Pavan Z 748

    Ensemble: The Fires of London. Conductor: Peter Maxwell Davies.
    • UNICORN-KANCHANA : ---.
    • UNICORN-KANCHANA.
    • 1.
  • Peter Maxwell Davies

    Pavan Z 750

    Ensemble: The Fires of London. Conductor: Peter Maxwell Davies.
    • UNICORN-KANCHANA : ---.
    • UNICORN-KANCHANA.
    • 1.
  • Peter Maxwell Davies

    8 Songs for a mad king

    Performer: The Fires of London. Conductor: Peter Maxwell Davies. Singer: Julius Eastman.
    • UNICORN-KANCHANA : DKP(CD)-9052.
    • UNICORN-KANCHANA.
    • 1.

Broadcasts

  • Tue 14 Mar 2017 12:00
  • Tue 14 Mar 2017 18:30

Vaughan Williams Today

Vaughan Williams Today

Programmes, concerts and features celebrating Vaughan Williams's 150th anniversary.

Beethoven Unleashed – the box set

Beethoven Unleashed – the box set

The complete set of Radio 3 Beethoven Unleashed podcasts, with Donald Macleod.

What was really wrong with Beethoven?

What was really wrong with Beethoven?

Georgia Mann and neurosurgeon Henry Marsh examine the composer's numerous health problems

Composers A to Z

Composers A to Z

Visit the extensive audio archive of Radio 3 programmes about Composers and their works.

Who knew? Five eye-opening stories from Composer of the Week

Who knew? Five eye-opening stories from Composer of the Week

The production team reflects on 5 of Donald Macleod’s best stories from the last 20 years

Five reasons why we love Parry's Jerusalem

What is the strange power of Jerusalem which makes strong men weep?

A man out of time – why Parry's music and ideas were at odds with his image...

The composer of Jerusalem was very far from the conservative figure his image suggests.

Composer Help Page

Find resources and contacts for composers from within the classical music industry.