MICHAEL OLIVER
20 July 1937–1 December 2002
I
first met Michael Oliver in the early 1980s over the cheese counter
at Budgen’s supermarket, Crouch End, where we both shopped on Saturday
mornings. His name (and voice) were both familiar from his many radio
broadcasts, principally as the presenter of ‘Music Weekly’ on Radio
3 (from 1975 to 1990) and of ‘Kaleidoscope’, the nightly arts review
programme, on Radio 4 (from 1975 to 1987), and I admired his work enormously.
When the idea of an English Song Award was mooted (inspired by the once-only
Finzi Song Competition) and we were looking for a chairman with appropriate
qualities and standing in the British musical world, he seemed to be
an obvious choice.
Initially he resisted, for he was a reticent man and
also wished to know what exactly he would be letting himself in for
– I’m sure he was highly suspicious of committees and committee members;
but eventually he succumbed, and was a tower of strength, providing
an effective sheet anchor to control and consolidate the committee,
consisting as it did of a range of people with differing ideas and requirements
and unafraid to articulate them. Michael made you think about and justify
what you were saying, in that quiet but penetrating way that was unsurprising
to those who knew his broadcasts. Our negotiations with the Brighton
Festival were greatly assisted by him, and it was his skill, combined
with that of our President, John Carol Case, that enabled us to find
a home there for the duration of the Award.
When we finally got to Brighton for the actual competitions,
we (the ‘officials’) worked tremendously hard but had a wonderful time
and, after the first year, all lived together in Topp’s Hotel, Regency
Square – where he had stayed during the first competition – on his recommendation
(‘You get wholemeal toast at breakfast – without having to ask for it!’).
Michael was one of those people who appeared to have a rather impenetrable
exterior, behind which an almost imperceptible twinkle could be discerned,
which dissolved at the right moment into the most delightful grin. He
had a wonderfully dry sense of humour, and wry opinions of the world
and, I know, was absolutely delighted to be doing what he wanted to
do, and always dreamed of doing: broadcasting on Radio 3 and writing
for Gramophone magazine. He didn’t want to be lumbered with the
English Song Award for ever (the business side could seem unbearably
tedious), and when I was asked to succeed him as chairman (having served
on the executive committee from the start), I knew what a hard act he
would be to follow, and I’m quite sure I failed lamentably to match
his standards, and certainly his gravitas, in the conduct of
the Award’s business. (I know for a fact that several of my colleagues
thought so too!)
He continued to broadcast, though less regularly than
before, and to write, and his reviews in Gramophone (from 1973),
quite often of the more exotic areas of the repertoire, were pithy and
passionate. I suspect that this was owing to his lack of a formal musical
education: he had not come through the hallowed ranks of university
and music college. His break came when he presented programmes for Radio
London (from 1970 to 1975), having previously worked as a librarian,
hospital porter, mortuary attendant, etc., and in publishing. He always
claimed to have been educated ‘during the school holidays’ from St Clement
Danes Grammar School (from where he went to Isleworth Polytechnic and
the London College of Printing). Focussed on his real passion he blossomed,
and displayed a tremendous intellect, particularly in his books (Igor
Stravinsky, Benjamin Britten, and, as editor, the splendid
Settling the score: a journey through the music of the twentieth
century), without being ‘intellectual’, as well as a real enjoyment
of, and enthusiasm for, music. This made him such an effective broadcaster.
The broadcasts that stick in my memory are his piece about Mongolian
polyphonic chanting, perfectly serious but hilariously funny; and a
‘Music Weekly’ tribute to Herbert Howells, who had died while Michael
was in Italy, recorded (he told me) over an uncertain telephone line
from a cupboard under the stairs of his hotel: the words and the delivery
were of course impeccable, only the sound quality (comparable to those
memorable 1970s reports filed by Michael Elkins from war zones in Israel)
reminded us of the high standards we had perhaps taken for granted when
listening to him week after week.
We kept in touch sufficiently to exchange Christmas
cards each year. Our intention to meet at the Wisteria Tea Rooms, Crouch
End, and to introduce him to my new family, was thwarted when the Wisteria
Tea Rooms closed down and, as is so often the case when friends and
colleagues die suddenly, I deeply regret the many opportunities squandered.
He died of a brain haemorrhage on 1 December and will be sorely missed.
© GARRY HUMPHREYS, 2002
This review appears here courtesy of
the British Music Society
Picture courtesy of Gramophone. Photographer: Bayley