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Anthony Payne

Born in London, Payne first seriously studied music at Durham University. His professional career began around 1969 with his first major work, the staunchly modernist ''Phoenix Mass'' for choir and brass band. He continued to write choral and vocal works, almost exclusively to British poets. From his 1981 chamber work ''A Day in the Life of a Mayfly'' on, he synthesised modernism with the English romanticism of Elgar, Delius and Vaughan Williams. Two orchestral commissions for The Proms, ''The Spirit's Harvest'' (1985) and ''Time's Arrow'' (1990) were well received. After his successful completion of Elgar's unfinished third symphony, Payne became unsure of his musical identity. He found difficulty in subsequent composition until a series of orchestral works for the Proms, ''Visions and Journeys'' (2002), ''The Period of Cosmographie'' (2010) and ''Of Land, Sea and Sky'' (2016).
Payne held academic posts at various institutions throughout his career, including Mills College, the London College of Music, the Sydney Conservatorium of Music, the University of Western Australia and the University of East Anglia. Despite regular commissions from a variety of English ensembles, he was not a particularly mainstream composer and was forced to supplement his income with writings. A noted critic, he wrote for ''The Daily Telegraph'', ''The Independent'' and ''Country Life''. Other writings include publications on a variety of musical topics, notably —a study on the composer Arnold Schoenberg—and numerous works on the music of Frank Bridge, to whom he was particularly devoted. Provided by Wikipedia