(Stephanie Shepard attended Majorca TTC)


by Sue Steward
Saturday April 9, 2005
The Guardian 

In 1978, the singer and musician Stephanie Shepard, who has died of 
cancer aged 64, and her partner Patrick Meadows, a jazz musician and 
poet, bought an old farmhouse with three cottages at Deią, in the 
mountains of Majorca. The village was a focus for artists, home to 
Robert Graves and a refuge for exiles from London's psychedelic rock 
scene, such as Kevin Ayers, Daevid Allen and his group Gong, and 
Robert Wyatt. 

It had been in 1975 that Shepard met Meadows and they began playing, 
she recalled, impromptu "duets, flute and piano and baroque sonatas, 
and choral pieces". By 1978, "para-musical workshops" of early music 
were attracting German, French, Dutch and English friends, who rented 
the cottages. From that summer, emerged what became the Atardecer 
(Sunset) concerts, held at the Son Marroig palace, outside Deią. 
The concerts - focused around the couple's chamber group Tafel Music -
 developed, in the 1980s, as the Deią international summer music 
festival. It has grown to be one of Europe's most idiosyncratic 
classical festivals. Most concerts are still performed at Son 
Marroig, against the sunset. 

Music was researched and commissioned by Meadows through the winter, 
and Shepard translated the programmes into Mallorquin. Local artists 
design the programme: this year's will feature a portrait of Shepard 
and Meadows by the British painter Phil Shepherd. 

Shepard was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, the daughter of an artist and 
an amateur singer. From 1963 to 1965, she studied recorder and music 
theory in New York, and at the Royal College of Music in London with 
Edgar Hunt. 

In the late 1960s, she became involved in transcendental meditation, 
which led to her first visit to Majorca; after a spell back in the 
United States, she settled in Deią in 1973. Then came the meeting 
with Meadows. 

The couple also hosted rehearsals for the 16-piece Studium, conducted 
by the young Palma singer Carlos Ponseti. Today 60-strong, it is one 
of Spain's leading choirs; Shepard, a contralto, sang with it until 
just before her death. She was interred to the sound of their songs. 

Shepard's other passion was the garden she created on the farmhouse 
terraces. At its entrance, a jacaranda frames a dazzling kaleidoscope 
of colours, while birdsong echoes amid the tones of wind chimes. A 
set of tributes to her is being published by Tomįs Graves, son of 
Robert. 

Shepard's brief marriage to Peter Kolesar ended in divorce. She is 
survived by Meadows. 

· Stephanie Jane Shepard, musician, born May 18 1940; died March 10 
2005 







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