David Green

David Green (Books) is the imprint under which I published booklets of my own poems. The original allocation of ISBN numbers is used up now, though. The 'Collected Poems' are now available as a pdf. The website is now what it has become, often more about music than books and not so often about poems. It will be about whatever suggests itself.

Tuesday, 15 February 2011

From the Archives - James MacMillan


I'm not really an autograph hunter but equally won't forego the opportunity to get a book or programme signed by a much-admired artist if it presents itself. Because I'm a fan and prone to star-struck moments and hope to get in and out of any such encounters without making too much of a fool of myself. It doesn't necessarily always go to plan but meeting James MacMillan, the finest composer of my generation, was one time I just about got away with it.
In the Queen Elizabeth Hall on, as you can see, 11/10/97, we saw among other things a performance of a new work about Iona, called I, and at the interval I saw James several rows behind us and I managed to coincide, by subtle judgement of pace, our arrival in the aisle at the end of his row when he arrived there too. So I produced my programme and asked if he could sign it for me and you've never met a more charming man.
Having more of his music taped from radio concerts than on CD's, partly because it wasn't all available anywhere else, I said I hoped he didn't mind that I taped his music from the radio and he kindly said he was glad that I did without issuing me with a demand for royalties or a copyright writ.
He might not be Beethoven but his Seven Last Words from the Cross and Veni, Veni are among the best things I've heard by a living composer and the hand that wrote them signed my programme.
MacMillan is actually a couple of months younger than me and I suffer from a disorder that seems to admire my elders much more than anyone younger. I can take it if the date of birth goes up to, say, the mid-60's, but after that I start to wonder what kids can know. I know that's wrong but I don't know what I can do about it.
I wish I had never been told to respect my elders or that I had always done just as I was told.

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