Repertoire Search
Home
Composers
News
Genre
Listen
Rental
License
OnDemand
Film & TV
Calendar
Buy
Pops
Playlist
play
pause
stop
mute
unmute
max volume
00:00
00:00
Update Required
To play the media you will need to either update your browser to a recent version or update your
Flash plugin
.
Full list
Nicola LeFanu
Born:
1947
Nationality
: British
Publisher:
Novello & Co
Photo © Tim Fox
Nicola LeFanu was born in England in 1947, the daughter of Irish parents. Her mother was the composer Elizabeth Maconchy. As well as composing she has enjoyed teaching composition in England, America and Australia. For many years she taught at King's College, University of London, where she had a Chair in Composition. She is married to the composer David Lumsdaine and they have a son, Peter.
After her studies at Oxford, she spent a year at the Royal College of Music in London, where she won a Cobbett Prize with the
Oboe Quartet
in 1970. In 1972, she won a Gulbenkian Dance Award to work with the Ballet Rambert; in 1973, the Mendelssohn Scholarship, and a Harkness Award which took her for a year to the USA. During these years, she wrote works to commissions for the Cheltenham, Farnborough, Aldeburgh, and Norwich Festivals, and for the 1973 Promenade Concerts.
While in the USA, she wrote the song cycle
The Same Day Dawns
, commissioned by the Fromm Foundation and first performed by Diana Hoagland and members of the Boston Symphony Orchestra with the composer conducting.Nicola LeFanu has written music for orchestra, chamber groups, many works for voice and several operas. Her opera catalogue includes the chamber opera
Dawnpath
(1977), a radio opera
The Story of Mary O'Neill
(1986), a children's opera
The Green Children
(1990), (libretto by Kevin Crossley-Holland), and
Blood Wedding
(1992), (libretto by Debra Levy, after Lorca).
Nicola LeFanu's fifth opera,
The Wildman
(1995), was another collaboration with Crossley-Holland; it was commissioned by the Aldeburgh Foundation and premiered in June 1995, with members of the Britten Sinfonia and Nicholas Cleobury. Following this premiere, performances of
The Wildman
then took place at Huddersfield, St. Magnus, Oxford, and the Theatre Royal, Bury. The opera is in two acts and scored for eight singers (playing 14 characters) with a chamber ensemble of twelve players.
Recent new works include
Sextet - A Wild Garden
(scored for mixed ensemble), which was premiered by Concorde in Dublin 1997;
String Quartet 2
was commissioned, and premiered, in London, by the International String Quartet Competition in 1997;
On the Wind
(for a cappella choir) was commissioned and first performed by Cantique, in Cork in 1997; and
Duo Concertante
(1999), for solo violin and viola and orchestra, was commissioned and premiered by the Northern Sinfonia in March 2000. Since 2000, LeFanu's music has been published by Edition Peters.
Close