Dear colleagues,

The last major work by the late Sir John Tavener, the British composer, was a modern classical setting of Śaṅkara's Saundaryalaharī.  It received its premiere on Sunday last, at the Barbican in London.  Sir John worked with W. Norman Brown's text and translation (Harvard, 1958).

It was broadcast live on radio, and can be heard on BBC Radio 3's website for a few more days: http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b04jj824.  (Listeners outside the UK may need a VPN connection to a computer inside the UK.)

One listener who attended the premiere, said,

It was indeed an amazing flood, a wash of sound and texture, and indeed text.  In the hall itself, I was rather tense and aware that it might seem quite long, but after it was over, there was a sense that it could easily have been enjoyed for longer, and the radio broadcast is very easy to appreciate.

The translation of the text (there was so much!) was put on big screens, but I am not sure that really helped - that ancient Sanskrit has a different flavour all together.  Of course that was interesting in itself, but overall, the music was the embodiment (as it were) of the text, so the specific words weren't necessarily needed.

It was a flood, and it was beautiful.

Another performance is being planned for Singapore next year.

Best,
Dominik Wujastyk