LEGENDS OF
LIGHT MUSIC
Charles Williams

If you look
closely at who composed much of
the catchy Light Music we all so
enjoyed in our youth, then one
name stands out. All the more
surprising, therefore, that he
became a largely forgotten
figure.
Charles Williams
was prolific and without equal in
familiar popular music. His
pedigree was impressive and his
achievements remarkable, so who
was this man who bequeathed so
much enjoyment to the nation by
writing the signature tunes for
such programmes as "Dick
Barton, Special Agent",
"Jennings at School",
"BBC TV Newsreel", and
"Friday Night is Music
Night"?
His real name was
Isaac Cozerbreit and he was born
to Jewish immigrant parents from
Poland on 8th May, 1893, in
Turner Street, East London. His
father, a former travelling child
singer whose repertoire ranged
from synagogue liturgies to
choral and operatic music,
changed his professional name to
Charles Williams, the same as a
nationally-known choral
conductor.
In 1913 Isaac
legally adopted his fathers
new name and it was as Charles
Williams that he signed up with
the Kings Royal Rifles
during the Great War. It meant
his violin-playing and general
studies at the Royal Academy of
Music were interrupted, but after
hostilities ceased he resumed his
career and joined the famous J.H.
Squire Octet. Two years later, in
1920, he formed his own Charles
Williams Octet. The tscene was
set for greater things.
Versatility might
have been a good middle name
because Charles was just at home
at the Royal Opera House, Covent
Garden, as he was in the theatre
pit of the Empress cinema in
Brixton. As Leader of the
prestigious New Symphony
Orchestra, he played under the
baton of Sir Landon Ronald, Sir
Thomas Beecham and Sir Edward
Elgar, the latter presenting him
with an autographed copy of his
biography in recognition of
valuable services rendered.
By 1923 Charles
fancied having a go with the
baton himself and took to
freelance conducting with several
different cinema orchestras
performing for, and during the
intervals between, silent films.
After a residency at the New
Gallery in Regent Street, he
moved to the Davis Theatre in
Croydon and so enjoyed the
experience that in 1929 he
collaborated with others to write
the music for the first British
sound film. Entitled Blackmail,
it was the 10th movie to be
directed by an up-and-coming
young man called Alfred
Hitchcock.
Over the next 20
years Charles Williams wrote a
huge amount of film music,
virtually none of which was
publicly credited to him. This
was not unusual, however, indeed
all movie music up until about
the Sixties even that
composed by such famous names as
William Walton and Vaughan
Williams was invariably
thrown away after the film was
released. Like most early radio
and television programmes, nobody
ever envisaged any future
interest. How wrong they were!
Williamss
contribution to the large screen
included further commissions from
Alfred Hitchcock, the comedies,
of Will Hay, and the 1937 version
of The 39 Steps starring Robert
Donat and Madeleine Carroll.
Post-war he had a great hit with
"The Dream of Olwen"
from the film While I Live,
Recorded by many artistes
(including Rawicz and Landauer on
Evergreen Melodies E56) this
music became almost synonymous
with his name and long outlasted
the celluloid. Surprisingly, in
1960 his "Jealous
Lover" was chosen as the
theme for the American film The
Apartment. Starring Jack Lemmon,
it was a huge success and reached
Number 1 in the charts over
there!
The golden era of
sound movies lasted until the
late-Forties, and altogether
Williams contributed music to
more than 100 different films,
including many for Gainsborough
and Gaumont-British, whose
Shepherds Bush premises later
became the BBC Lime Grove studios
after the independent film
industry collapsed. This kept him
busy but occupied only a small
fraction of his eventful career.
From the
late-Thirties onwards the demands
from Cinema Newsreels prompted
the big London publishers to set
up Recorded Music Libraries. The
pioneers included de Wolfe,
Boosey & Hawkes, and
Bosworth, followed by Paxton,
Keith Prowse and the most
important of them all, Chappell,
who had established the original
1916 Queens Hall Light
Orchestra (QHLO), to promote
their own music in live concerts.
Although this ceased with the
birth of radio in the
mid-Twenties, the New QHLO was
now established to provide
"mood" music for the
infant Chappell Recorded Library.
Around this time,
because they would not allow him
to compose as well as conduct,
Charles Williams turned down an
offer from Boosey and Hawkes to
lead a similar recording
orchestra. It turned out to be
Chappells good fortune
because in 1942 they invited him
take charge of their New QHLO. As
a result, the war years saw some
marvellous 78 rpm background
Light Music recordings and it was
not long before the public wanted
to hear more of the tunes and
less of the programmes.
This was hardly
surprising because patriotism was
at its height and the melodies
flowed quickly and fluently from
Williamss musical quill.
Titles such as "Convoy
Attack", "Naval
Action", "Sons of the
Air", "Desert
Warfare", "Engine
Room" "War in the
Jungle",
"Searchlight",
"Resistance" and
"Commandos" all speak
for themselves. They were
miniature masterpieces which kept
the patriotic musical flame
alive. Not all the music was
dramatic, however, and many
quiet, reflective works also
emerged, none more so than
"The Young Ballerina",
famous as the background music to
the television interlude called
"The Potters
Wheel".
Other famous
pieces included "Voice of
London", (signature tune of
the QHLO), "The Old
Clockmaker" which introduced
"Jennings at School",
"Girls In Grey" (a
tribute to the Womens
Junior Air Corps) which jauntily
serenaded the airwaves circling
round the mast of Alexandra
Palace at the start of each
"BBC Television
Newsreel", and "A Quiet
Stroll", a delightful
signature tune to the early
morning "Farming"
programme. "Rhythm on
Rails" introduced
"Morning Music",
"High Adventure"
preceded the long-running
"Friday Night Is Music
Night", and many others were
heard at the cinema on
"Pathe News".
By all accounts
Williams was a real gentleman and
extremely popular with his fellow
musicians whom he inspired to
great heights. This probably
explains why he was never short
of people to record on Saturday
mornings at the EMI studios in
Abbey Road.
Realising the
commercial potential of his
music, in 1946 he resigned as
conductor, composer and arranger
for the QHLO (the prefix
"New" having by now
been dropped) and went freelance
He was succeeded firstly by
Robert Farnon (see Evergreen
Spring 2002), and later by Sidney
Torch, both of whom carried on
his pioneering work. Charles,
meanwhile, established his own
Concert Orchestra drawn from the
same brilliant instrumentalists
as the QHLO, broadcasting several
times a week on BBC radio.
Farnon and Torch
also later operated independently
with identities cunningly
disguised for copyright purposes,
e.g. the elusive Ole Jensen and
the Melodi Light Orchestra which
were pseudonyms for Robert Farnon
and others. It was a golden era
of melody and all three men
broadcast regularly on the radio.
However, it all came to an end
during the early-Sixties when a
routine supply of mood music was
no longer required but
what a recorded legacy they left
behind.
Much of
Williamss music was not
intended for the general public
to buy but everything that did
appear on commercial Columbia 78
rpm records was eagerly snapped
up. Mention "Dick
Barton" to anyone over 60
and they will immediately think
of the breathtaking signature
tune, "Devils
Galop" (only one
"l" in Galop which is a
dance not a horse race!). It is a
fast and energetic tune but in
order to further magnify the
suspense, the BBC sound engineers
played it even faster, usually
preceded at the end by a
breathless Dick Barton gasping
something like "Look out
Snowy, theyre getting
away!"
Sadly, alcoholism
was a disease which he constantly
battled against during the latter
stages of his life and his
awareness of the problem led to
him declining an honorary Doctor
of Music degree offered by Oxford
University. He no longer
considered himself worthy of the
award nor trusted himself to
attend such an important
ceremony. Given his brilliant
musical pedigree and influence on
his many peers, this was nothing
short of a personal tragedy.
After living much
of his life in Hampstead, West
London, Charles retired with his
wife to Findon, on the South
Downs near Worthing in West
Sussex. He died there on 7th
September, 1978, aged 85, a
largely forgotten figure because
Light Music had gone out of
fashion. However, a recent
upsurge of interest in our great
British musical heritage has
brought about a much-needed
reappraisal of this truly great
composer.
Reproduced by kind
permission of This England
magazine.
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