"But I'll remember not only a really, really good musician, but a man of great passion -- who loved travelling to bizarre and exotic places. I recall him coming up after concerts and telling me where he was going the next day, in quite some detail, and how excited he was about his travels.
"I didn't know him very well at all, but he left an impression on me all the same. A man who loved music and teaching; a man so talented sometimes you'd even feel him looking at you thinking 'really? -- this isn't THAT hard' and man who loved travelling and sharing that travel with people.
"My condolences to his family and friends."
Chandler's profile on the Christchurch Symphony Orchestra website said he began studying bassoon at the age of 11, and first played for the civic orchestra in 1983.
He studied piano and bassoon at the Guildhall School of Music in London between 1987 and 1991, and became the Christchurch Symphony Orchestra's second bassoonist the following year.
An accomplished pianist, he won the National Concerto Competition in 1985 with a performance of the Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto No. 1.
The profile said he kept a busy piano teaching schedule and was also active as a soloist and accompanist, occasionally appearing as a piano soloist with the orchestra.
The orchestra website said he was an avid traveller and photographer.
"He has now visited 78 countries in all seven continents. Two highlights have been travelling to the Falkland Islands, South Georgia and the Antarctic Peninsula in 2006 and on the other side of the world, photographing polar bears in Spitsbergen in 2012."
He was also "a keen cook" and a "Coronation Street addict".
Senior Sergeant Roy Appley said investigations to determine what led to Chandler's death were continuing.
"Mr Chandler is a well-known local man and our thoughts are with his family and the other members of our community who were involved in this event, at this sad time."
The death has been referred to the coroner.