Life[edit]

Nicola LeFanu was born in Wickham Bishops, Essex, England,[2] to William LeFanu and Elizabeth Maconchy (also a composer, later Dame Elizabeth Maconchy). She studied at St Hilda's College, Oxford, before taking up a Harkness Fellowship at Harvard. In 1972 she won the Mendelssohn Scholarship.[3] She later became Director of Music at St Paul's Girls' School (1975–77), taught at King's College London (1977–1995, as Lecturer, Senior Lecturer and Professor), and was then a Professor of Music at the University of York, where she was Head of Department from 1994 to 2001. She retired from teaching in 2008.[4]


In 1979 she married the composer David Lumsdaine.[5]


She earned a Doctorate in Music from the University of London in 1988 and holds honorary doctorates from the Universities of Durham and Aberdeen and from the Open University. She is active in many aspects of the musical profession, as composer, teacher and director.[6]

Dawnpath, a chamber opera (1977),

The Story of Mary O'Neill, a (1986)

radio opera

The Green Children, a children's opera to a libretto by (1990), based on the Green children of Woolpit

Kevin Crossley-Holland

Blood Wedding (1992, libretto by Debra Levy after )

Federico García Lorca

The Wildman, another collaboration with Crossley-Holland, commissioned by the and first performed in June 1995

Aldeburgh Foundation

Light Passing (libretto by John Edmonds, BBC/NCEM, York, 2004), which played to sellout audiences and received critical acclaim

[7]

LeFanu has written around sixty works, including music for orchestra, chamber groups and voices (including four string quartets), and six operas. Her music is published by Chester Novello and Edition Peters.[1]


Opera


Orchestral


Chamber

Recordings[edit]

Recordings of four orchestral pieces - The Crimson Bird, The Hidden Landscape, Columbia Falls and Threnody - were issued by NMC in 2020.[9] A collection of her chamber music by Gemini, issued in 2024, includes The Same Day Dawns (1974, for soprano and five instruments), The Moth Ghost (2020 for soprano and piano), the Sextet (1996) and the Piano Trio (2003).[10] Gemini also recorded Invisible Places and Songs Without Words in 2017.[11]

Nicola LeFanu's web page at ChesterNovello

Nicola LeFanu's web page at Peter's Edition

at the Wayback Machine (archived 10 February 2008)

Nicola LeFanu's profile at the University of York

discography at Discogs

Nicola LeFanu

at IMDb

Nicola LeFanu