Family Card - Person Sheet
Family Card - Person Sheet
NameJohn Nigel BUSBRIDGE , 282
Birth18 January 1932528
Death8 February 2023, Pool Orchard, near Broadway, Willersey, Gloucestershire, England Age: 91
Burial27 February 2023, St Peter’s Church, Willersey, Worcestershire, England
FatherWalter George BUSBRIDGE , 281 (1901-1979)
MotherMary Gertrude OSMOND May , 209 (1902-1983)
Spouses
Birth2 February 1934529
Burial15 October 2019, St Peter’s Church, Willersey, Broadway, Gloucestershire, England
Death4 October 2019, St Richard’s Hospice, Worcester, Worcestershire, England530 Age: 85
Family ID782
Marriage5 April 1961, Holy Cross Church, Bearstead, Kent, England531
Children(Living) , 284
 (Living) , 285
 (Living) , 286
 (Living) , 287
Notes for John Nigel BUSBRIDGE
2023. Email from John’s son via Tim Osmond saying, John died last week at home. I have chosen the 14th, so could be wrong.
Notes for Doreen Rosemary (Spouse 1)
Doreen and I first met over sixty years ago, playing string quartets on a chamber music course. Subsequently, in London, Nigeria, Liverpool, Edinburgh, Kenya and Pakistan, we played and sang together in a great variety of circumstances.
After our move to Willersey in 1994 Doreen frequently played the organ for services in this church. She formed the U3A choral group two years later, directing and developing it until, when she retired, now two years ago, it was a well-balanced choir of nearly fifty voices.
We sang Mozart’s Ave verum corpus on several occasions, in particular at the funerals of departed members. One of the last pieces we learnt and performed with her was a six-part Cantate Domino by Motneverdi; the Pitoni four-part setting, dating from the following century, is similarly joyful.
And then - domestic chamber music! Many quartet sessions, especially, covering a wide range of periods and composers. But we were working with friends , before our enforced cessation, on movements from Beethoven’s late, great B flat quartet. Beethoven’s emotional and stylistic range is vast. The tuneful simplicity and charm of the German dance leads to a deeply felt slow movement. Doreen was intent on mastering the strange passage near the end of this Cavatina, uniquely marked beklemmt, where the ‘oppressed’ first violin drifts away from the other instruments in a recitative of its own, duly rejoining them in a rapt conclusion.
John 532
Last Modified 27 February 2023Created 12 June 2025 using Reunion for Macintosh