Barrie Gavin

Barrie Gavin

Biography and cause of death of Barrie Gavin

Barrie Gavin (10 June 1935 – 12 November 2024) was a British film and television director.

 

Barrie Gavin Early life

Gavin was born in London on 10 June 1935. His parents were John Gavin and Margaret Gavin (née Elder). He was educated at St Paul’s School, and studied history at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge from 1954 to 1957. He joined the BBC as an assistant film editor in 1961. With the opening of BBC Two in 1964 he began to direct programmes principally about music.

In the early years of BBC2, there was regular coverage of chamber music, and Gavin learnt his craft with many studio-based productions. These experiences led to his work as a documentary filmmaker. Gavin subsequently worked at London Weekend Television and the British Film Institute in the 1970s before returning to the BBC.

 

Barrie Gavin Collaboration with Pierre Boulez

In 1966, his interest in contemporary music brought him into contact with Pierre Boulez. Over the next 40 years, they collaborated on a series of analytical documentaries on the founding fathers of 20th-century music: Schoenberg, Berg, Webern, Bartók, Stravinsky, Ives, Varese, Messiaen and of course Boulez himself. They made twelve films together:

Pierre Boulez: Portrait – Analysis – Performance, 1966
The New Language of Music (Schönberg, Berg, Webern)
The New Rhythm of Music (Bartók, Stravinsky)
Telemarteau (Le marteau sans maître)

The Outsiders (Ives, Varese)
Olivier Messiaen: Vision and Revolution
A Different Beauty (Webern) 1977
The Doors are Open (conducting master classes in Lucerne)
In Search of the Future (80th birthday portrait for German TV)
Tomorrow Today (the Boulez years at the BBC) 2005
Boulez Now (retrospective up to mid-1980s)
Pierre Boulez: Living in the Present 2005

 

Barrie Gavin Portraits of contemporary composers

From the 1970s until the end of the 20th century Gavin specialised in portraits of contemporary composers: Roberto Gerhard, Luciano Berio, Luigi Nono, George Benjamin, Karlheinz Stockhausen, John Adams, Sofia Gubaidulina, Aribert Reimann, Toru Takemitsu, Isang Yun, Harrison Birtwistle, Peter Maxwell Davies, Mark-Anthony Turnage, Oliver Knussen, Hans Werner Henze and many others.

 

Barrie Gavin Films on folk music

In 1970, Barrie Gavin began to explore folk music with the writer and musician A. L. Lloyd. Together they travelled across the British Isles and visited Romania, Hungary, the United States. The death of A. L. Lloyd in 1984 brought this work to an end.

 

Barrie Gavin

 

Barrie Gavin Years in Germany

In 1977, Gavin had been invited to Germany to make a film about Kurt Weill. This marked the beginning of a long association with German television, resulting not only in many documentaries (mainly in Frankfurt for the producer Swantje Ehrentreich) but also in a new area of work, directing concerts for television. To date, he has been responsible for some 250 relays of concerts and opera.

 

Barrie Gavin Collaboration with Sir Simon Rattle

In the 1980s, Gavin began a collaboration with Sir Simon Rattle, on a series of productions with the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra. The list of films created together includes:

1911 (a trilogy on a crucial year in music)
From East to West (a trilogy on the influence of the East on classical music)
A Symphony in Time of War (Stravinsky – Symphony in three movements)
Young Apollo (the early works of Britten)

Carl Nielsen: A Life in six Symphonies
Leaving Home (a seven-part series on the music of the 20th century)
Sinfonia (Luciano Berio)
The Middle of Life (Hans Werner Henze)
A Romantic Imagination (3-part series on Berlioz)
Stockhausen: Gruppen (documentary and performance)
Collaboration with Gerard McBurney
In 1989, Gavin worked for the first time with the composer and writer Gerard McBurney. Their co-produced films included:

Think Today, Speak Tomorrow, Giving Voice, two films on dissident composers in the Soviet Union (from 1990)
The Fire and the Rose, about Sofia Gubaidulina (from 1990)
The Face behind the Face (Shostakovich)
In 2006, Gavin began a collaboration with Gerard McBurney and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra on a series of music documentaries, for the Beyond the Score Series. These documentaries included:

Bartók – The Miraculous Mandarin Archived 22 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine 2006
Mozart – Piano Concerto No. 27, K.595 Archived 31 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine 2007
Tchaikovsky – Symphony No. 4 Archived 30 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine 2008
Shostakovich – Symphony No. 4 Archived 30 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine 2008

Holst – The Planets: suite Archived 25 March 2011 at the Wayback Machine 2008
Vivaldi – The 4 Seasons Archived 22 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine 2008
Mussorgsky/Ravel – Pictures from an Exhibition Archived 30 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine 2008
Sibelius – Symphony No. 5 Archived 19 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine 2010
Dvořák – Symphony No. 9 (From the New World) Archived 11 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine 2010
Debussy – La Mer Archived 22 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine 2010

 

Barrie Gavin Films on arts and literature

Whilst much of Gavin’s work concentrated on music, he also produced in 1967 a series on classic film directors. He also produced films on literature and the visual arts, which included:

Sir William in search of Xanadu (Award of Montreal Festival of Films on Art, 1984)
Images – A History of Early Photography (Award of New York Festival of Films on Art, 1989).

 

Barrie Gavin

 

Barrie Gavin Later projects

In 2007, Gavin finished a film, Finding the Music in Croatia, on the composer Nigel Osborne. In 2008, he received an award from International Music Publishers’ Association for Services to Contemporary Music. In 2009, he completed a film Towards and Beyond (Jonathan Harvey), a portrait of the composer. In 2010, he made two short films: A Mind of Winter (George Benjamin) and How Slow the Wind (Toru Takemitsu), using music by these composers. He also started work on a continuing series of archival, unedited interviews, mainly with contemporary composers.

Copies of many of Gavin’s films on contemporary music have been deposited in the archives of the Paul Sacher Foundation in Basel, Switzerland.

 

Barrie Gavin Death

Gavin died on 12 November 2024, at the age of 89. His widow, the children’s writer Jamila Gavin (née Patten), and their two children survive him.

 

Barrie Gavin Filmography

Masterworks, 1966
Music on 2, 1970
Omnibus, 1971–73
Aquarius, 1972
Scenes from a Geordie Ceilidh, 1976
A Line Through the Labyrinth, 1977

Robert Vas Film-maker, 1978
The Lively Arts, 1977–79
But Still We Sing, 1979
Ruddigore, 1982
The Tenor Man’s Story, 1985
Guitarra, 1985
Ernest Ansermet: Archives and Memories, 1985
Towards Antara, 1987
Leonardo, 1987
Crossover: Richard Rodney Bennett, 1987
Billy Budd, 1988
The Cunning Little Vixen, 1990
Hector Berlioz: Symphonie fantastique, 1991
Carmen by Georges Bizet, 1991
Opus 20 Modern Masterworks: Ernst Krenek, 1991
Georg Friedrich Händel: Messiah, 1992
Mlada, 1992

Berlioz: Messe solennelle, 1993
Benjamin Britten: War Requiem, 1993
Cleveland Plays the Proms, 1994
The Fairy Queen, 1995
Peter Grimes, 1995
Soviet Echoes, 1995
Verdi, 1995
Leaving Home, 1996
American Dream: Stephen Collins Foster und seine Zeit, 1997
In Rehearsal: Christoph von Dohnányi with the Philharmonia Orchestra, 1998
Between Two Worlds: Erich Wolfgang Korngold, 2001
All the Russias, 2002

 

Source: Wikipedia

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