British Light Music
Charles WILLIAMS (1893-1978) Devil’s
Galop (Dick Barton, Special Agent) [2.48]
Charles Williams and his Concert Orchestra (1948)
Robert FARNON (1917-2005) Portrait of
a Flirt (In Town Tonight) [2.43]
Queen’s Hall Light Orchestra/Sidney Torch (1948)
Ray MARTIN (1918-1988) Marching Strings
(Top of the Form) [2.40]
Ray Martin and his Concert Orchestra (1952)
Arthur WOOD (1875-1953) Barwick Green
(The Archers) [2.47]
Sidney Torch and his Orchestra (1951)
Robert FARNON (1917-2005) Sunny Side
Up (BBC Light Programme) [1.58]
Robert Farnon and his orchestra (1957)
Ron GOODWIN (1925-2003) Red Cloak
[2.36]
Ron Goodwin and his Orchestra (1957)
Sidney TORCH (1908-1990) London Transport
Suite: ‘The Hansom Cab’ [2.09];
‘Rosie The Red Omnibus’ [2.01]; ‘5.52 from Victorloo’ [2.14]
Robert Farnon and the Danish State Radio Orchestra (1957)
Angela MORLEY (1924-2009) Starlight
[2.52]
Robert Farnon and the Danish State Radio Orchestra (1956)
George SIRAVO (1916-2000) Bumps-A-Daisy
[2.38]
George Siravo and his Orchestra (1956)
Eric COATES (1886-1957) By the Sleepy
Lagoon (Desert Island Discs) [3.03]
Eric Coates and the London Symphony Orchestra (1940)
Television March [3.21]
Eric Coates and the London Symphony Orchestra (1946)
Knightsbridge March from London Suite [4.17]
Eric Coates and London Philharmonic Orchestra (1933)
The Merrymakers, Miniature Overture [4.13]
Eric Coates and the London Symphony Orchestra (1931)
Calling All Workers (Music While You Work) [3.05]
Eric Coates and the London Symphony Orchestra (1940)
Oxford Street March from London Again Suite [3.25]
Eric Coates and the Symphony Orchestra (1936)
Percy GRAINGER (1882-1961) Country Gardens
[2.14]; Shepherd’s Hey [2.07]; Molly on the Shore [4.26]
Londonderry Air [3.35]
Frederick Fennell and the Eastman-Rochester ‘Pops’ Orchestra (1960)
Dates refer to recording, not composition.
REGIS RRC1381 [62:04]
Regis here presents the listener with a perfect introduction to British (Australian!)
Light Music. These historical recordings cover a diverse group of composers;
however most of the tunes will be familiar, if not by title then by ‘sound’.
Enthusiasts of the genre will probably have umpteen examples of each of these
pieces in their CD or iPod libraries. However, for someone wishing to explore
the field there could be no better place to begin.
There are many Light Music recordings these days: I recall some thirty years
ago trying to track down a copy of Robert Farnon’s Portrait of a Flirt.
I eventually found one on an obscure cassette tape! Nowadays there are seven
versions listed on Arkiv and no doubt many more lurking in compilations.
Recordings of this type of musical work tend to come in two guises: one is
‘historical’ and the other is freshly minted. Ronald Corp’s adventures on
Hyperion
are a good example of the latter, whereas the massive cycle of Guild Light
Music CDs reflects the huge interest in the former.
The present collection has been lightly ‘themed’. The first ‘part’ includes
works by a number of composers, the second has six well-known pieces by Eric
Coates and finally there are four tunes by the Australian composer, Percy
Grainger.
Many light music pieces have been used in TV or Radio programmes as ‘signature’
tunes. Appropriately these are detailed in the liner-notes. I confess that
some are before my time! However many are still in use such as Coates’ ‘Sleepy
Lagoon’ for Desert Island Discs, and Arthur Wood’s ‘Barwick Green’
for The Archers. Special highlights include Robert Farnon’s rarely
heard ‘swinging’ piece ‘Sunny-Side Up’. Another gem is the London Transport
Suite by Sidney Torch. Here we can enjoy the escapades of travel in the
Capital from an earlier day. ‘The Hansom Cab’ rattles down the Strand, ‘Rosie
the Red Omnibus’ waits for passengers outside Harrods and the shoppers are
on-board the ‘5.52 from Victorloo’! Intellectuals will enjoy Ray Martin’s
‘Marching Strings’ which was used in Top of the Form! Detective-novel
enthusiasts will relish Charles Williams’ once ubiquitous ‘Devil’s Galop’
that featured in Dick Barton, Special Agent. I had not come across
Ron Goodwin’s ‘Red Cloak’, with its lavish Iberian mood: it is an impressive
little piece. Finally there’s Angela Morley’s romantic ‘Starlight’ - the perfect
complement to Farnon’s ‘Flirt’.
Eric Coates is well represented with extracts from his two fine London
Suites – the Knightsbridge March and the equally catchy, but
less often heard Oxford Street March. I particularly enjoyed the
hard-to-find Television March dating from 1946 (also Avie,
Guild)
– the early days of ‘telly’ indeed. The Merrymakers Overture is a
little gem which really epitomises the genre; it was composed as early as
1922. All the Coates pieces are recordings of the composer conducting the
London Philharmonic or Symphony Orchestras. So they are, in many ways, definitive,
although I do wonder if they were ‘paced’ to fit on one side of a 78rpm record.
It is a little unusual to include Percy Grainger in a compilation such as
this – especially with four pieces (see also Mercury).
However these ‘favourites’ performed by Frederick Fennell and the Eastman-Rochester
‘Pops’ Orchestra will allay any concerns. Whatever genre they fall into these
are four little masterpieces. And Grainger did spend time on London, so he
could perhaps be regarded as an ‘honorary’ Englishman’ – at least for the
purposes of this CD! I especially enjoyed Molly on the Shore, although
Country Gardens and the Londonderry Air are by far the best
known pieces.
This CD is billed as ‘super budget’ and certainly at £5.50 is attractive value
for money. The liner-notes are helpful and the programme is broad. Finally
the sound quality of these pieces is excellent, bearing in mind that they
were ‘laid down’ between 1931 and 1960.
John France
A perfect introduction to British Light Music.