LEGENDS OF
LIGHT MUSIC
Philip Green

Philip Green was
born in 1911, and he started to
learn the piano at the age of
seven. He won a scholarship to
London's Trinity College of Music
when aged only thirteen, where he
studied many areas of music
including theory, harmony,
orchestration and composition. He
completed his studies by the age
of eighteen, and began his
professional career playing in
various orchestras. Within a year
he became London's youngest West
End conductor at the Prince of
Wales Theatre.
His long recording
career began with EMI in 1933,
and during the following years he
directed and played piano and
harpsichord on 78s with many
leading bands, including Teddy
Foster, Henry Jacques, The New
Mayfair Dance Orchestra, Harry
Roy and Jack Simpson - as well as
lesser-known ensembles with
intriguing titles such as The
Bravour Dance Orchestra, The
Celestial Beings and The
Bunkhouse Boys. However the vast
majority of his numerous pre-war
records had his own name on the
label, directing diverse groups
like The Seven Kings of Rhythm,
Busketeers, Swing on Strings,
Rhythm on Reeds and Don Miguel
and his Cuban Music (one of his
many pseudonyms, some others
being Louise Duke, Jose Belmonte,
Ricardo Lamarr and Don Felipe).
During the Second World War he
made numerous sides for Decca's
'Music While You Work' series.
From 1935 to 1939 Philip Green
was closely associated with the
commercial radio programmes which
were beamed towards Britain from
the continent of Europe -
sometimes as many as seventeen
broadcasts a week. Clearly his
later reputation as a workaholic
had its roots very early in his
career. The commercial stations
were forced to close down during
the war, so he transferred his
allegiance to the BBC, where he
was responsible for several
popular shows including
"Salute to Rhythm",
"Band Call",
"Cuban Caballeros" and
"Music Society for Lower
Basin Street".
For several years
he was a 'house
arranger/conductor' at Decca,
accompanying many of their star
vocalists such as Gracie Fields,
Denny Dennis, Donald Peers and
Anne Shelton. From the mid-1940s
onwards he was responsible for
more than 150 film scores, some
of the best remembered being:
"Romance" featured in
"The Magic Bow" (1946),
"Saints and Sinners"
(1948), "Man on the
Run" (1949), "Ha'penny
Breeze" (1950), "Young
Wives' Tale" (1951), Isn't
Life Wonderful" (1952),
"The Yellow Balloon"
(1952), "Park Plaza
605" (1953), "Conflict
of Wings" (1954), "One
Good Turn" (1954),
"John and Julie"
(1954), "The March
Hare" (1956), "Carry on
Admiral" (1957), "Sea
Fury" (1958), "The
Square Peg" (1958),
"Violent Playground"
(1958), "Operation
Amsterdam" (1959),
"Sapphire" (1959),
"Make Mine Mink"
(1960), "The League of
Gentlemen" (1960), "The
Singer Not The Song" (1961).
"Victim" (1961),
"Tiara Tahiti" (1962),
"A Stitch in Time"
(1963), "Masquerade"
(1964), "The Intelligence
Men" (1965) and "The
Yellow Hat" (1967). Green's
themes for "John and
Julie" and "The March
Hare" both won Ivor Novello
Awards.
Such was his
prestige in the British film
industry that Philip Green was
eventually appointed resident
musical director of the Rank
Organisation. All this work for
the cinema was being achieved at
the same time as he was making
the occasional commercial
recordings, and also composing
numerous pieces of mood music for
major London publishers including
Chappell & Co., Francis Day
& Hunter, Paxton and EMI's
Photoplay Music, where he
ultimately became the only
contributor to the catalogue.
His radio and
television credits were numerous:
the BBC's early TV feature
"Picture Page" used his
"Shopping Centre"
(resulting in a commercial
recording by Charles Williams),
and one of the Light Programme's
most popular comedies "Meet
the Huggetts" featured
"Horse Feathers" as its
signature tune - both these
numbers originated from the
Chappell Recorded Music Library.
Two ITV shows "Ghost
Squad" and "The Golden
Shot" had Philip Green
themes.
Philip Green was
not as prolific in the commercial
recording studios compared with
some of his peers (he was too
busy on other projects), but his
post-war single releases included
ten 78s for MGM, and similar
numbers for Decca, Columbia,
Parlophone and Top Rank. In
addition he arranged and conduct
several memorable LP albums
including: "Moments in
Mayfair", "Follow The
Sun" and "Pan-American
Panorama" (for EMI
Columbia); "Wings of
Song" (Top Rank); and
tributes to great song-writers
such as Rodgers and Hammerstein,
Jerome Kern and Irving Berlin
(for RCA).
Towards the end of
his career he moved to Ireland,
where he developed his interest
in music with a religious theme.
Two which he regarded with
particular pride were "St
Patrick's" and
"Children's Masses for Choir
and Orchestra". Philip Green
died late in 1982 in Dublin,
following a long illness; his
widow Dorothy died in 1995.
Both of them are
remembered today through the
Philip and Dorothy Green Music
Trust which, in July 2002,
awarded Making Music, the
National Federation of Music
Societies, the largest single
donation in its 65-year history,
in the form of a gift of
£310,000. This was granted to
secure for the future the Making
Music Award for Young Concert
Artists and to set up a new
Composer in Residence scheme for
Making Music. The gift was
accompanied by a proportion of
the annual composer royalties
accruing to the Philip and
Dorothy Green estate.
David Ades (August
2003)
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