Background
Oxley was born on 3 April 1933. His father was an organist and metallurgist, and Oxley learned how to play the organ from watching his father at Street Francis of Assisi"s Church, Bournville, Birmingham, where he was the deputy organist.
Oxley was born on 3 April 1933. His father was an organist and metallurgist, and Oxley learned how to play the organ from watching his father at Street Francis of Assisi"s Church, Bournville, Birmingham, where he was the deputy organist.
Christ Church; King Edward"s School, Birmingham.
At the time, he was the youngest cathedral organist in the country. He was the first English cathedral organist to supplement the boys" voices in the cathedral choir with those of girls. He began to use girls" voices in the early 1970s.
As a pupil at King Edward"s, he studied under the school"s Director of Music, Willis Grant, who appointed him as his Assistant.
He became organ scholar of Christ Church, Oxford in 1951, under Thomas Armstrong. He was appointed assistant organist in 1953 and obtained a first-class degree in music from the University of Oxford in 1954.
After National Service, Oxley was appointed as Organist of Street Edmundsbury Cathedral in 1957, aged 24 – the youngest cathedral organist at that time. His conducting of the Bury Bach Choir (with whom he worked until his retirement in 2001) was highly praised.
The mixed choir stopped some time after a new Provost of the cathedral took office in 1981 and began to phase out the girls.
Oxley resigned in 1984 on a point of principle. He said that he had never been forgiven by some other cathedral organists for his actions, but he could not see a reason to "bar half of humanity from the benefits and opportunities of cathedral choir membership."
Oxley was a noted organ recitalist, in Britain and in the United States, and composed both choral and organ music, his "Elegy" becoming a standard in the repertoire of 20th century organ music A stroke in 2003 meant that he had to re-learn how to play the piano and organization
He died of heart failure on 6 April 2009.
His funeral was held at the cathedral.