David Fanshawe

David Fanshawe

The symphonic works of British composer David Fanshawe were infused by a global range of ethnic and traditional influences. Fanshawe's ethnomusicological visits to Africa, Arabia, Alaska and the Pacific Islands provided a foundation for Fanshawe's compositions.
Fanshawe's most successful piece, "African Sanctus," was the subject of an award-winning BBC documentary. A thirteen movement composition, it blended elements of the Latin Mass and Anglican Liturgy with traditional African music based on recordings that Fanshawe collected while traveling down the Nile River in the early-1970s.
A native of Dover, England, Fanshawe studied at St. George's Choir School and,with a full scholarship, the Royal Conservatory of Music. Fanshawe's travels yielded more than two thousand tapes, one thousand boxes of slides and forty volumes of his handwritten journals. His compositions include "Fantasy On Dover Castle," "Requiem For The Children Of Aberfan," "The Awakening" and "Romanza Burlesque." ~ Craig Harris

Type

Person

Born

Apr 19, 1942

Born in

Devon

Died

Jul 5, 2010 (aged 68)

Country

United Kingdom

ISNI code

0000000119370288