"I have worked closely with Jonathan for 30 years," said Sally Cavender, vice-chairman of Faber Music. "His impact as a composer has been profound and international in its scope. The spirituality of his music also pervaded his personality; no one who met him came away without commenting on his gentleness, generosity and breadth of imagination … Music simply poured out of him, naturally and organically. In every sense he was a superior human being and one that it has been a privilege to know, as much as it has been a delight to treasure his music."
"We have lost a hugely important figure in classical music," said Roger Wright, controller of BBC Radio 3 and director of the Proms. "His was a powerfully original music which rightly received international acclaim. His gentle spirit and inner strength impressed me greatly and he will be much missed."
Much though I like Radio 3 I do find Wright and his team deeply hypocritical: this is the second time that the death of a famous composer has immediately been followed by a piece of his music (the other was Carter) on 'breakfast on three', when normally the music of those two composers is not heard on air the length of the year (apart from the ghetto of 2230 on a Saturday). Come on Radio 3, try to honour these composers in their own lifetime rather than a one-off tribute on their death: we have way too much of the baroque and romantics. We live in the twenty-first century and yet one would think that we live in 1899 with modern radio to hand.