Terry Barfoot, MWI Reviewer
Obituaries by Roy Westbrook and Ian Lace
I met Terry Barfoot when we were schoolboys together at the Northern
Grammar School in Portsmouth in the 1960’s. We were team mates in
football and cricket teams back then, and followers of Hampshire cricket
and Portsmouth football clubs. Even in later years it was unwise to call
him if Pompey had just lost. But when we re-encountered each other after
University it was through a common, and then recent, passion for
classical music. In our twenties we discovered the repertoire together
in concerts and on record. Terry became a schoolmaster, but soon began a
secondary and then after some years a primary, career in musical
education for adults. His evening and weekend classes, pre-concert
talks, invited lectures, and programme notes made him a familiar and
much-admired figure, along the south coast and beyond.
He had many
qualities that suited him to this role; a wide knowledge, a fluent and
engaging manner (often humorous but never frivolous), and a talent for
organisation – things very rarely went wrong. But his special strength
lay in his passion for his subject and his genuine interest in every
individual in his audience. These two are at the heart of great teaching
in most settings of course, but not so common outside institutions, in
part-time and occasional contexts where contact is intermittent. Yet he
developed a large group of people who became loyal attenders at his
events, many becoming friends (and some even benefactors), such was the
impact he had and the gratitude he generated. It is worth noting that a
number of his acolytes (hardly too strong a term) had a deeper musical
background, sometimes a professional one, than Terry had, but still felt
they learned a great deal.
He contributed to books on music history, taught summer schools at
Oxford, and reviewed CDs for MusicWeb International. He also developed short courses
in residential settings, developing the enterprise
Arts in Residence
which offered beautiful music in special places, often small country
hotels in rural England. Later still some events were held overseas, in
the European cities associated with the great composers, where his
entrepreneurial flair and loyal following enabled him to keep these
affordable, below the prices set by the higher profile rivals seen in
glossy magazines. Terry rarely needed to advertise, except to his own
large mailing list of repeat customers who knew the value they would
obtain. Most events were oversubscribed, year after year.
I was one
of his occasional collaborators on these occasions, and co-author with
him on our book “Opera – A History”. When we taught courses together I
sometimes wondered what the audience made of our sparring, continued
from our playground days, which we still imagined to be witty, and which
we hoped might mature (it didn’t). He had above all, and in
abundance, the most precious of talents, a talent for friendship. One of
his supporters phoned in to the BBC’s Today programme one morning a few
years back, and suggested him as ‘Man of the Year’. But his various
contributions spanned many years, and would have continued but for his
devastating illness, and still more the interruption to its treatment
due to the Covid-19 pandemic. He died on 12 August 2020, a few weeks
short of his 71st birthday. He leaves his wife Jan, and sons Philip and
Matthew.
Roy Westbrook
Terry was an outstanding figure in the musical life of southern England
and beyond. He wrote and lectured widely about music and opera. He was
Publications Consultant to the Bournemouth
Symphony Orchestra. He lectured, for example, at the British Library,
the Austrian Cultural Forum, Opera Holland Park, the Royal Opera House, the
Three Choirs Festival and at Oxford University, where he gave a series of
lectures on Beethoven. His last book, A History of Music, written for
Omnibus Press, was published in October 2014.
Terry contributed to Classical
Music, Opera Now, and BBC Music Magazine as well as MusicWeb International,
and for many years, he was editor of the Classical Music Repertoire Guide.
His book Opera: A History was published by The Bodley Head, and he
contributed to The International Dictionary of Opera and The New Grove
Dictionary of Music and Musicians.
He inaugurated his ‘Arts
in Residence’ organization to promote musical events throughout
Britain and in Europe, and led visits to Prague, Leipzig, Vienna, Amsterdam,
Budapest and Berlin. In 2017 he gave a series of pre-concert talks at the
Sibelius Festival in Lahti, Finland.
I was delighted when Terry invited me
to join him in giving pre-concert talks at the Hawth Concert Hall, in
Crawley; and certain other music events, including a celebration of the
music and life of Gustav Holst and musical presentations at the Earnley
Concourse.
Terry was always very friendly, very approachable
and encouraging of colleagues, and extremely knowledgeable but he wore
that knowledge lightly. His great enthusiasm and dry wit will be
greatly missed.
Ian Lace