LEGENDS OF
LIGHT MUSIC
Donald Phillips

Donald Phillips
was born in Dalston, East London,
in 1913.
He did not have a
musical background; his father
was a journeyman tailor. His
mother paid for some music
lessons, but although Donald had
to leave school early, his love
of music shone through.
He was
talent-spotted when, as a boy of
14, he was heard playing the
piano at a pub in Maida Vale by
the musical writer and publisher,
Lawrence Wright.
As young Donald's
success grew, his sheet music was
proudly displayed in the window
of Wright's music publishing firm
in Denmark Street, Soho, centre
of the popular music business.
He joined the
Musicians' Union in 1936 and
remained a member for nearly 60
years. During the Second World
War, he served in the RAF and was
part of a forces entertainment
team. He later entertained the
troops in Cyprus with Harry
Secombe.
An accomplished
pianist, he was musical director
and accompanist for the
entertainment stars of the 1940s
to the 1960s the Marx
Brothers, Beverley Sisters,
Dickie Valentine, Shirley Bassey,
Donald Peers, Alan Jones, Dick
Emery, Anne Shelton, Yana, Jill
Day, Joan Regan, Anita Harris,
Susan Maughan and, most recently,
Ted Rodgers.
He took part in
the 1954 royal command
performance before the Queen at
the London Palladium. In 1958 he
won the Ivor Novello award for
his outstanding contribution to
British popular music with
"Melody of the Sea".
In the early
1960s, he composed entries for
Ronnie Carroll and Matt Monroe in
the British Eurovision song
contest. In 1963 he won an
international music competition
organised by Radio Prague.
His ambition to
write a musical was realised in
1977, when "The
Barrier," a love story set
in Northern Ireland, was
performed in Holland and recorded
by Elaine Paige. But, partly due
to the opening of
"Evita" the following
year, with Miss Paige in the
title role, the show never
reached London.
Donald Phillips
retained his courtesy and
professionalism even during his
last five years, when he
developed Parkinson's disease.
During his long
career, mostly out of the
limelight, he was regarded as a
true Tin Pan Alley
man. Among his compositions
were Old Piano Rag, A Live Show
is the Best Show, Broken Date,
and To Him Were All The
Same. Two major mini-concertos
stand out: Concerto in Jazz
recorded by several
leading orchestras including
Sidney Torch, Mantovani and
George Melachrino; and Skyscraper
Fantasy was probably his
best-known work, although its
transatlantic style sounded more
like the work of an American
composer, than a Londoner. This
was also recorded by Mantovani
for Decca, although the Charles
Williams version on Columbia
(coupled with the Spellbound
Concerto) will have been the
bigger seller. Both of these
works have been reissued in
recent years on compact discs.
Donald
Phillips music was played
and sung on both sides of the
Atlantic by artists, bands and
orchestras, including Winifred
Atwell, Russ Conway, Lalo
Schifrin, Liberace, Billy Cotton,
Sid Phillips (no relation) and
Sidney Torch.
He died in 1994 in
a Jewish Care Home in Hemel
Hempstead.
David Ades
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