James Whitbourn was born in Kent and educated at
Skinners' School before winning a scholarship to
Magdalen College, Oxford, where he gained his first two degrees. His international reputation as a composer developed from his early career as a programme maker at the
BBC, during which he produced many award-winning programmes and developed a style known for its direct connection with audiences. His close association with the BBC Philharmonic resulted in three large-scale commissions for voices and orchestra. His
Son of God Mass has had many performances worldwide, especially in the US and Europe. In 2005, The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra with the Choir of Clare College Cambridge, under
Leonard Slatkin, premiered his largest choral work
Annelies, a setting of the
Diary of Anne Frank, at London's Cadogan Hall to wide critical acclaim. The work was later re-scored in an alternative chamber version which was premiered in The Netherlands on what would have been Anne Frank's 80th birthday by the British violinist
Daniel Hope and the American soprano
Arianna Zukerman. Whitbourn wrote a number of works for the late British tenor
Robert Tear, with whom he also collaborated as librettist, including a festal setting of the
Magnificat and
Nunc Dimittis for
King's College, Cambridge, a cantata for the St Endellion Festival and three Christmas carols. Other major works include the choral work
Luminosity, scored for choir, viola, organ, tanpura and percussion and
The Seven Heavens for choir and orchestra, which portrays the life of
C. S. Lewis in the imagery of the medieval planets.
The Seven Heavens was premiered at the
Ulster Hall with the Belfast Philharmonic and the Ulster Orchestra. From 2006 his compositions have been performed in several major concerts devoted to his music at
Westminster Choir College in Princeton, New Jersey with whom he had a long-lasting association. In 2010 the Oxford-based chamber choir Commotio released a disc of his choral music on the Naxos label,
Luminosity, which attracted much attention especially in the USA. In 2011, The
Williamson Voices released the second Naxos choral disc,
Living Voices with the saxophonist Jeremy Powell, and organist
Ken Cowan under conductor James Jordan. 2013 saw the release on Naxos of
Annelies, with Arianna Zukerman, The Lincoln Trio, Bharat Chandra and the Westminster Williamson Voices under James Jordan. Television credits include music for the BBC's coverage of the Queen Mother's funeral, and major BBC series
Son of God. Among many international awards and achievements, he earned three GRAMMY nominations (including Best Choral Performance for
Annelies) and a Royal Television Society Award. He was Senior Research Fellow of St. Stephen's House, University of Oxford, and was a member of Oxford's Faculty of Music. In April 2020, he was appointed Director of Music at
St Edmund Hall, Oxford, and in 2022, he was appointed Director of Music at
Harris Manchester College, Oxford. Whitbourn died from cancer on 12 March 2024, at the age of 60.
Career highlights • 2000 – winner of
Sandford St Martin Premier Award (with poet
Michael Symmons Roberts) for
Pika. • 2001 –
A Finer Truth – debut album of choral works sung by Clare College Choir Cambridge – released by Et'cetera. • 2001 – orchestral score of multi award-winning BBC1 series
Son of God. • 2002 –
Living Voices premiered in New York concert on the first anniversary of 9/11. • 2004 – set prayer by
Desmond Tutu for the Commonwealth Observance, Westminster Abbey. • 2005 – movements from
Annelies performed at the National Holocaust Commemoration, Palace of Westminster. • 2005 – World premiere of
Annelies given in London with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra under
Leonard Slatkin. • 2007 – U. S. premiere of
Annelies by Westminster Choir College's
Williamson Voices under the direction of
James Jordan. • 2008 – Premiere of
Luminosity in Philadelphia Cathedral, US with Daniel Stewart (viola), Westminster Williamson Voices and Schola Cantorum and Blair Academy Singers under James Jordan with Archedream Dance Theater. • 2009 – The Netherlands premiere of
Annelies in The Hague on the 80th anniversary of Anne Frank's birthday, with Daniel Hope (violin) and Arianna Zukerman (soprano). • 2010 – release of Naxos disc
Luminosity. • 2011 – release of Naxos disc
Living Voices. • 2012 – two GRAMMY nominations (Best Opera Recording). • 2013 – release of Naxos disc
Annelies. (GRAMMY nomination for Best Choral Performance, 2014) • 2015 – World premiere of
The Seven Heavens, the life of C. S. Lewis in the imagery of the medieval planets, at the Ulster Hall, Belfast with the Belfast Philharmonic and the Ulster Orchestra. • 2016 – release of Naxos disc
Carolae. • 2019 – signed as house composer to Oxford University Press == Selected works ==