LEGENDS OF
LIGHT MUSIC
Billy Ternent

From the 1920s,
until his death on 23 March 1977
at the age of 77, Billy Ternent
was a highly respected figure in
the British popular music scene.
He was born in
Newcastle-upon-Tyne on 10 October
1899, and is reported to have
been playing the violin by the
age of seven. When only twelve
his first job was playing in a
trio accompanying the silent
films at a North Shields cinema,
and four years later he was
conducting a cinema orchestra on
a circuit owned by the theatrical
impresario George Black. Radio
didnt arrive on the scene
until Billy was well into his
twenties, but he soon became
involved in what was to become a
major part of his life. His first
broadcast was with a sextet from
a tea-room in his native
Newcastle.
Jack Hylton is
supposed to have discovered Billy
while playing with the Selma Four
in a Newcastle restaurant. He
took him to London where Ternent
played in Al Staritas band
at the Kit-Kat Club. Hylton may
well have been just in time. Like
many fellow Geordies,
Billy was fanatical about
football, and it is believed that
he seriously thought about
becoming a professional player.
Happily for us he decided that
his future was more secure in the
music business.
The reference
books tell us that Billys
first commercial recording was
playing tenor saxophone in the
famous Jack Hylton Orchestra at
an HMV session in the Small
Queens Hall, London, on 21
April 1927. Less than a month
later (on 10 May) he was back at
the same venue (also for HMV)
playing in the Kit-Kat Band
directed by Al Starita, with a
young Ted Heath on trombone. He
continued to record with the
Kit-Kat Band until its last
sessions in March 1928.
By then Billy
Ternent had become a stalwart of
the Hylton Orchestra. As well as
performing on alto sax, he also
did occasional vocals and
gradually provided the band with
many of its arrangements. Being a
multi-instrumentalist, he could
be relied upon to step in at
short notice to cover as
necessary when a musician was
missing.
Presumably Ternent
found his work with Hylton very
satisfying, no doubt enjoying the
opportunity to provide countless
superb arrangements for one of
Britains premier dance
orchestras. He accompanied Jack
Hylton to the USA in 1935,
although the American Federation
of Musicians would only allow a
small number of British players.
So the American
Hylton Orchestra included many
local instrumentalists, thus
giving Billy the chance to learn
at first hand how the American
musicians performed. He made a
point of seeing as many other
bands as he could. The Hal Kemp
Band particularly impressed him,
and in later years it was said
that the Ternent
sound (little
staccato passages, led by four
trumpets - also known as
triple-tonguing) was
partly influenced by Kemp.
Surprisingly Billy
Ternent did not start recording
in his own name until February
1938, when Billy Ternent
and his Sweet Rhythm
Orchestra cut just four
sides for HMV. Then there was a
big gap, until a new contract
took his orchestra into the Decca
studios in September 1943.
But he was far
from idle. Billy remained
Hyltons
right-hand-man until
he formed the third BBC Dance
Orchestra, succeeding Henry Hall
and Jack Payne. He was appointed
shortly after the outbreak of
World War 2 in September 1939,
and could be heard on the radio
almost daily, broadcasting from
somewhere in England
which often meant Bristol or
Weston-Super-Mare, in Somerset.
For a while the personnel in this
band were also available for
commercial recordings by the Jack
Hylton Band, but (unlike most of
his peers) Hylton recognised that
it would be difficult to keep up
standards with so many star
players being conscripted into
the Armed Forces, so his last HMV
sides were made in March 1940,
and Hylton thereafter
concentrated on theatre and
artists management.
Thanks to his
numerous broadcasts, Billy
Ternent became a household name.
For a while he was musical
director of Tommy Handleys
"ITMA" show, but the
hectic schedule of wartime
eventually took its toll, and
Billy resigned from the BBC in
March 1944 due to ill health.
Stanley Black took over his baton
at the BBC Dance Orchestra.
Once recovered, he
formed a new 14-piece band and
toured successfully throughout
the United Kingdom. When Radio
Luxembourg resumed commercial
broadcasts to Britain in December
1946, Billy Ternent featured in
the first programme, sponsored by
bookmakers William Hill. He was
in demand from West End theatres,
and conducted many shows,
including visiting American
artists (Frank Sinatra called him
"the little giant").
Radio was still an
important part of his life, and
he is particularly remembered for
"Variety Bandbox" and
the way he helped to launch the
successful career of Frankie
Howerd. This included several 78s
for the Harmony and Columbia
labels, which have become comedy
classics, some featuring Ternent
as the butt of Howerds
jokes. Routine work involved the
band playing summer seasons at
major seaside resorts and holiday
camps, plus numerous bookings at
ballrooms around the country. In
1951 the band accompanied Bob
Hope on his UK tour.
By now the Ternent
Band was well established,
enjoying success with its regular
public appearances, broadcasts
and recordings. He spent five
years, from 1962 to 1967, as
musical director at the London
Palladium, participating in
several Royal Command
Performances.
Billy continued to broadcast
tasteful programmes of mainly
dance music well into the 1970s,
although his later years were
troubled by recurring bouts of
illness. Alan Dell persuaded him
to conduct a selection of his
arrangements, to rapturous
applause, during a "Dance
Band Days" concert at the
Royal Festival Hall, London, on
12 June 1976, as part of the
BBCs Festival of Light
Music. This was to be his last
major engagement, although
stoically he continued to work
until a few weeks before his
death in March the following
year.
Billy Ternent only
ever had one signature tune -
"Shes My Lovely".
It came from a 1937 revue
"Hide and Seek"
starring Bobby Howes, and was
composed by the prolific Vivian
Ellis (also responsible forSpread
a Little Happiness, Coronation
Scot and the hit show "Bless
The Bride"). When he first
started using it in 1939, the BBC
received complaints because the
opening reminded listeners of an
air raid warning; that
distinctive ascending ensemble
arrangement made the Ternent band
instantly recognisable at the
opening of its hundreds of
broadcasts over the years.
David Ades
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