Max – Radio 3 composer of the week

Above: Max at Bunnertoon, Rackwick, Hoy, Orkney 1970s. Photograph: Gunnie Moberg

Sir Peter Maxwell Davies, more known in Orkney simply as Max, died a year ago this week. We are looking forward to celebrating Max and his time in Rackwick, Hoy in our summer exhibition HOY MAX. This exhibition in June will coincide with the St Magnus Festival, established in 1977 by Max and his friends, Archie Bevan and George Mackay Brown.

Max is the Radio 3 composer of the week, the five episodes start with how the island of Hoy influenced the man and his music. Click here to go to the first episode.

The contribution this former Master of the Queen’s Music has made to the musical life of our islands [UK] is incalculable. He was a hugely prolific composer, performer and teacher. 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 BBC Proms. However his music and life was to change as he came under the spell of the Orkney islands, which he first visited in the early 1970s before moving there a few years later for the rest of his life.

Donald Macleod twice visited the composer in Orkney, and begins the week with an exploration of how the islands’ landscape, history, environment, myths and its people inspired his work. – BBC Radio 3

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Archive Bevan, Max, Jack Rendall, Elizabeth Bevan at Bunnertoon c.early 1990s. Photograph: Gunnie Moberg

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One of the annual St Magnus Festival parties at Bunnertoon. Photograph from the Moar family.

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A page from Pearl Sinclair’s book ‘A Photographic Census of Hoy’ written by the Bevan family who now have Bunnertoon.

2 thoughts on “Max – Radio 3 composer of the week

  1. I spent a wonderful day with Max at Bunertoon one stormy day in March 1978, as part of a research trip to Orkney.
    It resulted in the composition of my 2nd Symphony – “A Little Orkney Symphony” – with a tenor soloist singing texts by Robert Rendell, Carlton Morris, Ronnie Aim and George Mackay Brown.

  2. Thank you for that recollection, it would be great to have part of the Hoy Max exhibition recording people’s memories (and creative outcomes!) of visiting Max in Rackwick. If you would like to do this please email us at hoy.heritage(at)btinternet.com
    Thanks again!

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