Paynter's compositions included chamber music, choral works and two children's operas, The
Space Dragon of Galata (1978) and
The Voyage of St Brendan (1979). Both works involved large forces, combining professional musicians and children in performance. Among teachers, Paynter’s best-known short piece is
Autumn, a setting of a Japanese
haiku for classroom performance. Among Paynter’s music composed for adults, his choral settings of
Gerard Manley Hopkins The Windhover, and ''God's Grandeur'' As an educator, Paynter's publication in 1970 of
Sound and Silence had a seminal influence of the practice of classroom music teachers. Paynter was passionate in his conviction that music was exciting for children to explore independently and that the subject could be approached in a multitude of different ways. While the public face of
music education in schools tended to concentrate on instrumental learning and teacher-directed performances by choirs and orchestras, the book introduced teachers to ways of helping pupils to explore and make their own interpretive decisions about sounds through working at composing projects. Paynter’s ideas influenced the development of music in the
General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE) in the 1980s and in the British
National Curriculum in the 1990s. Composing became a core musical activity in both of these programmes of study. ==Selected publications==