He died in Warminster.
The following article was published in The Daily Telegraph on 17 December 1986, shortly after his death:
"Maurice Handford who has died aged 58, was a conductor with a wide range in repertoire.
Although he was perhaps not a familiar figure to concert goers on the South Bank, he was well known to audiences in the rest of the country and from 1971 to 1975 was principal conductor of the Calgary Symphony Orchestra.
Born in Salisbury, he studied at the Royal Academy of Music.
Sir John trusted him enough to let him conduct Elgar and Vaughan Williams symphonies in which he himself excelled, but Handford never followed his mentor into Mahler and Bruckner.
He was responsible for performances of Messiaenâs Turangalila Symphony, Schoenberg's Erwartung and for introducing to Manchester the music of Lutoslawski and Penderecki.
But no assignment was more difficult than in September, 1970 when he conducted Elgar's Dream of the Gerontius in memory of Barbirolli, a performance that rose both musically and emotionally to the occasion.
He was by now in demand with other orchestras, such as the BBC Northern and Welsh, the CBSO and the Ulster, where his willingness to take on the unfamiliar was appreciated.
Unobtrusive style
He was for a time a conductor of the Liverpool Welsh Choral Union and until 1972 conducted the annual opera and choral performances of the Northern School of Music, Manchester.
His virtues as a trainer of students were also recognised by the Royal Academy of Music, where he conducted several remarkable performances.
Although the compilers of âNew Groveâ did not consider him worthy of inclusion and record companies virtually ignored him, Handford's unobtrusive style and his ability to get to the heart of a score were appreciated by musicians.
He was not the flamboyant maestro and this may have held back his career in quarters where flashier talents are admired.
But those who heard his finest Elgar performances and his lucid readings of complex contemporary works will know that music making in this country is much the poorer for his premature and lamented death."