LEGENDS OF
LIGHT MUSIC
Cyril Watters

CYRIL WATTERS : An
Unassuming Genius of Light Music
By DAVID ADES
Of all the many
musicians I have met since 1956
at meetings of the Robert Farnon
Society, few have been as modest
and charming as Cyril Watters. He
was a true gentleman, in every
good sense of the word, and it
was always a great pleasure to be
in his company. Never one to
promote his own music, he was
always at great pains to
compliment others on their work,
which was amply confirmed during
the many years that he guided the
Light Music Society as its
Secretary. This was during a
difficult period of the 1960s,
when the BBC and record companies
seemed to be turning their backs
on Light Music, but Cyrils
quiet persuasion undoubtedly
benefited many of his colleagues
in the profession.
Henry Cyril
Watters was born on 13 February
1907, the eldest of three
children whose parents were Henry
James and Florence Edith Watters.
His sister Vera was born in 1910,
and his younger sister Joan was
born in 1922. Cyrils fathers
family were Londoners in trades
such as boot making and
tailoring. His mothers
family had roots in oyster
gathering in the Whitstable area
going back to the 1740s.
From his early
childhood Cyril had a strong
desire to write music. In a
magazine interview in 1937 he
confessed that at the age of 12
he cajoled his sister and friends
to assist him in staging an
operetta, but his success as a
musician did not happen
overnight. He left school aged 16
in 1923 having matriculated, and
by day he worked as a ledger
clerk, while in his spare time he
played piano in various small
groups. He became known locally,
playing the piano at dances,
concerts and social events, and
was a member of the New
Shaftesbury Dance Band.
In 1929 he won the
first prize in a Melody Maker
Song Foxtrot competition with a
piece called Shes My Slip
Of A Girl. This was recorded
commercially by Tommy Kinsman
(Piccadilly records), Arthur
Lally (Decca), Ray Noble and the
New Mayfair Dance Orchestra (HMV)
and Jack Payne and his BBC Dance
Orchestra (Columbia). The
composer was credited as Henry
Watters, which must have
delighted Cyrils father who
had the same name.
This success
encouraged Cyril to send songs to
various publishers, but he kept
getting them rejected. In 1932 he
won £50 in a Daily Mail New
Rhythm contest, and a year
later he took the courageous
decision to devote himself full
time to music. For a short while
he studied at the Guildhall
School of Music, although he said
that most of his knowledge was
gleaned from text books.
The next landmark
came in 1935, when he signed a
contract with music publishers
Francis, Day and he joined the
Performing Rights Society. At the
same time he was still playing
the piano for his main source of
income, and during the summer of
1937 he was appearing regularly
at a roadhouse called
"Houseboat" near
Radlett, Herts.
By 1939 he decided
that his financial situation was
sufficiently secure, and he
married his wife Olive Doris at
Willesden Registry Office on 29
May. After a honeymoon in Devon
they spent the summer in the Isle
of Wight so that Cyril could
fulfil a playing contract.
Cyrils first
daughter Jill was born on 12
August 1940. When she was five
weeks old the family moved to
Hitchin, Herts to escape the
London bombing: the very same day
that they moved their house in
Willesden was destroyed. Cyril
had to remain to work in London,
so he lived with his parents for
a while.
On 15 July 1941
Cyril joined the Royal Air Force
and was trained as a radio
mechanic and in radar systems. On
15 February 1942 Cyrils son
John (always known in the family
as Jack) was born, and the same
year saw his first published
composition Irene. The copyright
contract showed his address as
RAF Neatishead, Norwich.
A second daughter Julie was born
on 30 May 1944.
After spending
most of the war at RAF bases in
England, early in 1945 he was
sent to Belgium then to Germany.
He returned to England in June,
and was demobbed in January 1946.
Back in civilian life Cyril
joined Lawrence Wrights
Music Publishers as an arranger,
where he remained until 1950. In
1947 the family had moved from
Hitchin back into London at 49
Geary Road, Dollis Hill,
Willesden, where Cyril lived for
the rest of his life.
The most
successful of Cyrils early
compositions wasBargain Basement,
which Boosey & Hawkes
recorded for their Recorded Music
Library in 1949. For a while
Cyril was at the music publishers
Chappell, often producing piano
scores of some of their most
popular light orchestral works.
Later he would talk about how
this gave him an insight into
Robert Farnons scores,
which he found fascinating.
Ice Shows were
also to play a significant role
in advancing Cyrils career
as one of the new breed of top
arrangers. In 1950 he provided
the orchestrations and choral
arrangements for "Cinderella
On Ice" at the Empress Hall,
and also composed some incidental
music. He was similarly involved
in the 1952 production of
"Puss In Boots" for
which he received the princely
sum of £275.00! Producers
outside London also engaged his
services, with his name appearing
on the credits for ice shows in
Bournemouth from 1952 to 1955.
Top stars of the time, such as
Tessie OShea and Janet
Brown also commissioned songs
from Cyril.
His gentle sense
of humour sometimes came to the
fore in the songs he composed.
When his children were young they
were taken on seaside holidays,
and they loved covering him with
sand on the beach. Cyril wroteI
Cant Remember Where I
Buried Daddy which went down well
in concert parties and cabarets.
From 1953 to 1962
he was the chief arranger for
Boosey & Hawkes, and they
published several of his own
compositions. His works were also
accepted by other publishers, and
by the end of the 1950s he was
one of Britains leading
composers of mood music
the melodies recorded especially
for use by radio, television,
films, documentaries and
newsreels. His output during the
1960s mushroomed to well over one
hundred compositions, one of them
"The Willow
Waltz" winning him a
prestigious Ivor Novello Award in
1960 following its use as the
theme for a BBC-TV serial
"The World Of Tim
Frazer".
Cyrils
contract with Boosey & Hawkes
was not restrictive. As well as
arranging music written by many
of their own composers, while
they were happy to accept many of
his original compositions, they
did not prevent him from
submitting work to rival
publishers. From 1962 onwards he
decided to work freelance, thus
ushering in a period of his life
that would witness a large number
of original compositions in many
styles.
In 1962 Cyrils
song White Wedding was recorded
for HMV by Sheila Southern with
the Mike Sammes Singers and Frank
Cordell and his Orchestra. It
sold steadily for a long time,
with total sales figures
exceeding many so-called hits
of the day, which often managed
big sales for a week or two (thus
placing them in the charts)
followed quickly by oblivion. The
tune was originally entered in a
songwriting contest promoted by
the People newspaper,
where it came 4th.
When he wasnt
working, Cyril enjoyed playing
cricket and he was also a
meticulous stamp collector,
amassing around 15 albums plus a
specialist one of Great Britain.
He also collected first day
covers, and sought out stamps
relating to music and dance.
By the mid-1960s
Cyril had composed over 300
works, half of which were for
background music libraries
today usually called production
music. In 1964 Radio South
East chose his Pot Luck as their
signature tune, which was heard
regularly for four years.
Although he professed to dislike
conducting, it was inevitable
that Cyril would one day be
engaged by the BBC. His first
broadcast conducting Cyril
Watters and his Players was
on the Home Service on 9 January
1963. But Cyril clearly didnt
press for more, because he didnt
return to BBC studios until 25
January 1965 for the famous
"Music While You Work"
programme, with a second
following on 10 May 1965 and a
final one on 4 July 1966. Cyrils
ensemble included famous names
including Reginald Leopold,
Arthur Anton and Robert Docker.
Prior to that, many of Cyrils
arrangements had been featured in
the show when he was an arranger
for various publishers. He also
contributed to the military band
repertoire.
Although he was
accomplished at writing in a
variety of different moods, it is
perhaps his bright and breezy
pieces that were so successful in
the mood music libraries. Not
content with just creating a
strong main melody always
instantly appealing - his works
are characterised by attractive
middle themes which lift the
composition to a higher level.
Not all his contemporaries took
such care in ensuring that their
works were so completely
satisfying.
Cyril went into
semi-retirement during the 1970s,
although he continued to compose
and arrange. Since 1982 his
health had been failing and he
died on 24 November 1984 aged 77.
It was not easy to
get Cyril to talk about his own
music, but he did once admit to
me that he was proud of his
Piccadilly Spree which Boosey
& Hawkes issued on a 78
record in 1953. I shall always
personally signed copy he kindly
gave to me.
The following
Cyril Watters compositions have
been released on commercial CDs
in recent years:
Bargain Basement
Vocalion CDVS 1958
Celtic Melody Vocalion CDLK 4192
Flat Spin Guild GLCD 5142
Melody At Moonrise Guild GLCD
5145; Vocalion CDVS 1958
Midsummer Madness Vocalion CDVS
1958
Paper Chase Vocalion CDLK 4274
Piccadilly Spree Guild GLCD 5103;
Vocalion CDVS 1958
Talking Point Vocalion CDLK 4192
A Selective
Discography of Production Music
composed by Cyril Watters
not in chronological sequence
Boosey &
Hawkes
Irene
Melody At Moonrise
Full Dress
Spring Idyll
Moods In Miniature
Back Chat
Evening Panorama
Sleepy Hollow
Willow Waltz
A Bedtime Story
Merry Madcap
Cat and Mouse
In High Feather
Shuttlecock
Saucebox
Lavender Lady
Fashion Notes
Little Miss Mischief
Damask Rose
Proud Heritage
Neck and Crop
Tea-time Gossip
Watersmeet
Celtic Melody
Talking Point
Pioneer Spirit
By A Mountain Lake
In Clover
Morning Reverie
Sea Voyage
In The Running
A Little Off Beat
Market Day In Martinique
An English Fantasy
Motorway Patrol
Mountain Railway
A Welsh Fantasy
Caribbean Caper
A Scottish Fantasy
Mediterranean Mood
Happy Ending
Paxton
On A Cheerful Note
Shadows On The Water
Gadabout
Leaps And Bounds
Top Of The Bill
In Full Cry
Making Merry
Francis, Day &
Hunter
Cock-a-Hoop
Theme for a Coquette
Willy Nilly
Crepe Suzette
Moonlight Flit
Ladies In Waiting
De Wolfe
The Fairy Ring
Call Boy
Ride-a-Cock-Horse
Tomfoolery
In Homage
Coming And Going
Morning Glory
Sporting Colours
Works Party
Sporting Notes
Poste Haste
Bosworth
Flat Spin
Behind The Footlights
Pelican Parade
Romantic Vision
Cat Among The Pigeons
Chorus Master
Autumn Glade
Charles Brull
(Harmonic)
Russia Marches On
Red Square
Josef Weinberger
Slav Dance
Holiday In Havana
Catch As Catch Can
Juile
Bric-a-Brac
Breakaway
Inter-Art
(Impress)
Sportsmans
Chance
Folies Parade
In Fine Fettle
Dangerous Conflict
Over The Mountain
Southern
Up and Going
Woodland Tryst
Poppycock
Moorland Song
Floor Show
In Good Humour
Sales Talk
Melody In Mink
Wallflower Theme
Quiet Valley
Carnival In Venezia
Serenade To Gina
Conroy (Berry
Music)
Treading On Air
Pep Talk
Chappell
Paper Chase
Pony Trek
Usherette
David Ades wishes
to thank Cyril Watters
daughter, Jill Coward, for her
valued assistance in preparing
this tribute. Also Brian Reynolds
for additional information.
CYRIL WATTERS
BROADCASTS
Broadcast 9.1.63 11.00am Home
Service (announced)
A Bedtime Story (Sig) Watters
Perpetuum Mobile Strauss
Vanity Fair Collins
A Mill in the Black Forest
Eilenberg
The Willow Waltz Watters
Faire Frou Frou Binge
Eriskay Love Lilt Kennedy-Fraser
Sleigh Ride Anderson
Ladies of Lisbon Tristan
Frasquita Serenade Lehar
Peanut Polka Farnon
A Bedtime Story (Sig) Watters
Players:
R.Leopold, A.Anton, E.Bryett, D
Bellman, E.Fox,
J.Collier, R.Docker, W.Davies,
E.Chapman (horn)
Music While You
Work 25.1.65 10.31a.m. Light
prog.
Calling All Workers Coates
Sleigh Ride Anderson
Amorette Watters
Boulevardier Curzon
Ladies of Lisbon Tristan
Tabarinage Docker
Vanity Fair Collins
Perpetuum Mobile Strauss
Louisette Vallez
Rio Rhythm Watters
Coralita Warr
Peanut Polka Farnon
Calling All Workers Coates
Players:
R.Leopold, A.Anton, H.C.Gee,
D.Bellman, E.Fox,
J.Collier, S.Bright, G.Blackmore,
M.Lewin
Music Whille You
Work 10.5.65 10.31a.m. Light Prog
Calling All Workers Coates
Sophie Galop Lanjean
Frasquita Serenade Lehar
Tango del Sol Watters
Tabarinage Docker
Louisette Vallez
Whisky Galore Hartley
Love Dance Hochna
Faire Frou Frou Binge
Belle of Brazil Rubach
Lady Beautiful Bayco
Peanut Polka Farnon
Calling All Workers Coates
Players:R.Leopold,
A Anton, H.C.Gee,K.Cummings,
E.Fox,
L.Cushion, R.Docker, L.Mordish,
M.Lewin
Music While You
Work 4.7.66 10.31a.m. Light Prog.
Calling All Workers Coates
Sophie Galop Lanjean
Frasquita Serenade Lehar
Tabarinage Docker
Belle of Brazil Rubach
Betty Dear Agoult
Shy Serenade Scott-Wood
Pancho from Peru Watters
Louisette Vallez
Faire Frou Frou Binge
Coralita Warr
Peanut Polka Farnon
Calling All Workers Coates
Players:
J.Gaillard, O.Rosen, A.Anton,
D.Bellman, B. Rickelman,
C.MacArthur, R.Docker, W.Davies,
M.Lewin.
This article first
appeared in "Journal Into
Melody", September 2010.
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