LEGENDS OF
LIGHT MUSIC
Roberto Inglez

ROBERTO INGLEZ
ELGINS MARVEL
In the centenary year of his
birth DON LEE suggests that
its time to re-evaluate the
pioneering output of Elgins
Latin-American Scot.
Most people
outside the readership of Journal
Into Melody today have not heard
of Roberto lnglez, nor listened
to his very individual sort of
Latin-American music. Yet,
instantly recognisable on
his specialist slow numbers
anyway by his relaxed
one-finger piano style that must
have been the background music to
many a romantic evening in the
1940s/1950s; this was easy
listening mood music years before
its time.
Lots of his
recordings, issued on almost 100
Parlophone 78s have never made it
to vinyl, let alone CD, although
there are 3 CDs available on
Vocalion (CDEA 6O62/6095/6131)
and all are well worth acquiring.
Guild CD have done their bit too
and individual tracks by lnglez
can be found on GLCD
5103/5133/5138/5173.
But who was lnglez
and what were his origins?
Robert Maxstone
Inglis was born June 29th 1913 at
7 West Road, Elgin in Morayshire.
His mother was a 20 year-old
clerkess Jeannie
Inglis; no father is listed in
the birth register.
Berties
piano lessons began at 5 years of
age and by the age of 12 he had
proved himself in exams. At 16
years, he was the pianist in a
local band: Eddies Melody
Makers. In 1933 a new roadhouse,
The Oakwood, had
opened on the outskirts of Elgin,
where the brand new Bert
Inglis Melody Makers
provided the necessary music. The
following year this ambitious
little outfit won first prize in
the preliminary heat for the
North East of Scotland Dance Band
Championship. They played three
numbers: "Lullaby
Lady", "You Or No
One" and "A Bugle Call
Rang Out". The main prizes
were a cup presented by The
Tune Times and a
years supply of dance
orchestrations from Lawrence
Wright Music. I wonder whatever
happened to the cup?
Berts main
occupation was training for
dentistry but a choice had to be
made: stay in Elgin with steady
work or, inspired by his
dedication to music and a
determination to succeed, seek
fame and fortune, perhaps, in
London.
He left Elgin and
enrolled at the Royal Academy of
Music studying orchestration and
arrangement and whilst there Bert
met another enthusiastic student
keen on the Latin sound then
emanating from the London club
scene one Edmundo Ros. In
1940 Ros formed Ross
Rumba Romantics with Bert
on piano now renamed
Roberto lnglez to fall in with
the Latin image. Parlophone saw
the commercial possibilities and
despite wartime difficulties of
shellac supply some 28 numbers
were recorded in 1941/1942. Ros
predominates but there is enough
of the lnglez piano featured to
judge how the Inglez style was
developing.
By 1944, IngIez
had left Ros to establish his own
9-piece rumba band. The new band
played one most important date on
October 15th 1944 at the now
demolished Stoll Theatre on
Kingsway: it was Jazz
Jamboree 1944. HeadIining
was the whole Glenn Miller AEF
orchestra and strings, no less.
Incidentally, the music programme
recorded as also present the
GeraIdo Orchestra with on 2nd
Alto, one Wally Stott. It must
have been quite an event.
In 1945, lnglez
made a huge professional jump to
become bandleader at
Londons premier hotel, The
Savoy, as relief band to Carroll
Gibbons. Parlophone saw their
chance again and lnglez, now with
his own band, his own
arrangements and at last
his own sound, began to
issue a long series of 78s
beginning with "Laura"
in October 1945. David Ades chose
this for his EMI compilation
Memories Of The Light
Programme in 1993. Even
though the Light Programme
didnt officially open until
1946, "Laura" was
regularly heard for many years
after it was first released.
Sometimes Robertos records
were show tunes and film
favourites amongst the
instrumentals aimed at foreign
markets, and there were a few
inoffensive vocals by Inglez in
an unmistakable Scottish burr.
However, prominent
amongst the material recorded
were slow and seductive Latin
rhumbas like "Come Closer To
Me", "Mi Vida" and
"Frenesi", that if
gathered together and sequenced
would more than match any
Iate night/after
hours material that
predominated in LPs of the 60s
and 70s, right up to the present.
By the late 40s
Inglez was able to undertake
foreign tours during the summer
vacation and it was the success
of these which eventually led to
him to be summonsed back to The
Savoy to fulfil his contractual
obligations.
When EMI began to
issue vinyl in 1953 there were
three 45s and one 10" LP by
the Roberto lnglez Orchestra but
they were all 78 reissues.
Another departure was in the
field of Radio Programme/Library
music and there is, at least one
example of a live performance of
the Inglez band for The Savoy in
a half hour programme
London Town. An
advert reproduced in JIM No. 145
(December 2000) is the only
evidence Ive seen of this
and more details would be very
much appreciated if anybody can
throw further light on this
little-known aspect of
lnglezs activities.
In early 1954,
with little warning, Inglez left
The Savoy and emigrated to Chile
to begin a new life there and the
regular series of Parlophone 78s
dried up. Recording activity in
Chile remains scantily documented
and awaits further research.
However, a World Record LP of the
early 70s escaped to
Britain and there were a handful
of other albums released locally
in South America.
There I must
finish for the time being
hopefully there may be a revival
of interest in this centenary
year of the Elgin
Marvel that will lead to a
re-evaluation of his unique style
of music, and perhaps a more
comprehensive reissue programme
of his works.
Roberto Inglez
died in Santiago on 4 September
1977 aged 65.
This tribute
appeared in the August 2013 issue
of Journal Into
Melody
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