LEGENDS OF
LIGHT MUSIC
Tony Osborne

Tony Osborne was a
well known name in Britain during
the late 50's, the 60s and
the early 70s, thanks to
his many recordings and
appearances on radio and
television. He was born Edward
Benjamin Osborne near Cambridge
on 29 June 1922, and completed
his education at St.
Georges College.
Tonys first
professional gig was as a 14
year-old accordionist in
Josephine's Gypsy Orchestra,
having been junior accordion
champion of East Anglia.
Eventually he escaped from those
Gypsies for long enough to form
his own band which became popular
in the Cambridge area.
During the second
World War Tony joined the Royal
Air Force in 1942, and spent
three years in Cairo and the
Middle East. Like many other
musically talented conscripts his
talents were soon put to good
use. His weapon of choice was the
trumpet and he played his way
through the war helping the likes
of 'Monty' and Ralph Reader to
entertain our troops to victory
...... At least that's his story!
Upon his discharge
from the RAF Tony's first
professional jobs were playing
trumpet and piano with the bands
of Cyril Stapleton and Frank
Weir, before moving on to Carroll
Gibbons and Ambrose. In those
bands he played alongside the
likes of George Shearing, Ronnie
Scott, Jack Parnell, John
Dankworth and Kenny Baker. He had
come home from the war with such
great technique and 'chops' as a
trumpet player that he was often
called in to augment the various
BBC orchestras on their bigger
programmes like 'The Goon Show'
and 'Take It From Here' but,
realising that he was never going
to be the best trumpet player in
England while Kenny Baker was
alive, Tony began concentrating
more on his piano. He became a
staff arranger for various top
publishing companies and this led
to increasing interest from the
record companies who soon noticed
that he was not only talented but
rather handsome as well. Osborne
eventually had major deals with
Pye, E.M.I and Decca (the big
three of their day).
In the late 1950s
he was musical director on
Britain's first ever pop music
television show, the BBCs
legendary 'Six-Five Special'.
This naturally led to work with
many of the top pop acts of the
time, such as Eden Kane, John
Leyton, Freddie and the Dreamers
and Peter & Gordon.
In 1948 Tony had
married lovely Lancashire lass
Joan Mason; they produced two
children and separated amicably
after 20 years. They're a musical
family. Son Gary Osborne became a
successful songwriter, famous for
his collaborations with Elton
John (including Blue Eyes &
Part Time Love) and Jeff Wayne
(The War of the Worlds &
Forever Autumn). While Tony's
daughter Jan Jones, herself once
an excellent singer, was for many
years married to Rock drummer
Kenney Jones, of The Small Faces,
The Faces and The Who. Tony's
brother-in-law is Bob Adams, a
'Geraldo' stalwart and top
session sax player in London's
50s and 60s. Bob worked closely
with Tony, often acting as the
'booker" who ensured the
presence on Tony's sessions of
such master musicians as Kenny
Baker, Ray Davies, Stan Roderick,
Kenny Clare, Ronnie Verrell, Roy
Willox, Keith Bird, Ike Isacs,
Joe Mudelle, and Frank Clark who
incidentally turns out to be the
virtuoso bassist son of none
other than Josephine (she of the
Gypsy Orchestra). A great reed
man and Tony's closest friend
(and biggest fan) for over half a
century, Bob Adams went on to
become the foremost musical
director in the South Africa of
the late 60s and 70s.
Tony soon
progressed to arranging and
conducting sessions for major
stars, such as Mel Tormé, Johnny
Mathis, Vera Lynn, Connie Francis
and Shirley Bassey. In 1964 he
conducted for Shirley at her
appearances in New Yorks
Carnegie Hall where he used to
open for her with a marvellously
flashy Liberace-type piano set.
Of a week he did
with Bassey in a big club in
Majorca, Tony recalls
"Shirley was eight
months pregnant at the time
and I honestly thought she was
going to have the baby right
there on stage. For her opening
number she used to come on, point
to the massive bulge in her
dress, and sing I
shouldhave danced all night
... it brought the house
down." That gig in Majorca
was at a club called Titos,
where Tony was to play again with
the next Diva to
avail herself of his services on
stage... Eartha Kitt.
Meanwhile back in
the recording studio Tonys
credits were beginning to read
like a Hall of Fame, including:
Buddy Greco, Alma Cogan, Larry
Adler, Gary Miller, Dakota
Staton, Dennis Lotis, Eve
Boswell, Hildegard Knef, Joni
James, Russ Conway, Millicent
Martin, Cleo Laine, Stanley
Holloway, Max Miller, Bud
Flannigan, Nina and Frederick,
Edmund Hockridge, Johnnie Ray and
Gracie Fields.
"When we were recording
Gracie's last ever hit 'Around
the World', producer Norman
Newell was bothered by a clicking
sound on the vocal track.
Eventually we worked out what it
was and I was given the
unenviable task of asking 'Our
Gracie' to take out her false
teeth whilst doing her vocals.
I'm relieved to say that she was
happy to oblige."
Tony always had an
easy affinity with female
artistes and after his time with
Shirley and Eartha, he was asked
in 1969 to become Musical
Director for Judy Garland. He
conducted three fantastic
concerts for her in Scandinavia,
but tragically a month later the
great Diva was dead.
"So much has
been said about Judy's troubled
life and the booze and drugs
which played such a destructive
part in it. All I can say is that
even at the very end of her
career, as depressed and confused
as she was, Judy was still the
ultimate professional. Before the
shows she was distant and,
obviously high on uppers, she
inhabited a planet of her own.
After the shows she seemed lucid
but lonely and would often ask me
up to her suite to chat for hours
about music, until the downers
took effect and she could sleep
at last. But between the uppers
and the downers.... out there on
the stage she was magic! ....
Alert and alive, as much a part
of the orchestra as she was a
part of the audience, she never
missed a cue and she never hit an
unmusical note. To cut a tragic
story short ... even at her very
last concert Judy Garland was
still quite simply The Greatest.
It turned out that we were born
just 10 days apart and we got on
so well that I was really
thrilled at the prospect of a
long association with Judy. Sadly
it was not to be, but those are
three concerts that I will never
forget".
Tony has had
compositions recorded by the
likes of Duke Ellington and
Shirley Bassey. Hes had
four Ivor Novello nominations,
winning the Award twice. One of
these was for 'Windows of Paris'
a catchy number which for many
years was the popular signature
tune for the BBC drivetime radio
show 'Roundabout'. The great
Johnny Mercer liked
'Windows so much he wrote a
lyric for it.
Tony Osborne has
also written the music for half a
dozen feature films (which his
son Gary describes as great music
for lousy movies!) Films include
'Every Day's a Holiday', 'The
Fiend' and 'The Secret Door'. He
also provided the music for
dozens of cinema and TV
commercials.
He is particularly
proud of a special symphonic
arrangement he once did for Louis
Armstrong to perform at the
Albert Hall of his signature tune
'Sleepy Time Down South'. Other
Osborne arrangements include 'I
Who Have Nothing' (for Shirley
Bassey); 'Sisters' (The Beverley
Sisters); 'Out of Town' (Max
Bygraves); 'Say It With Flowers'
(Dorothy Squires); 'When The
World Was Young' (Eartha Kitt);
and 'Miss You' (Jimmy
Youngs last ever hit).
Tony built up a
reputation through his
instrumental recordings in his
own name, but in fact he was more
prolific than many people
realised, having also made
several fine albums as
Laszlo Tabor'. It was in
the mid-1970s that Decca invited
him to record semi-classical
albums under that name. The best
of these was 'Gypsy Romance',
which allowed Tony's exotic
orchestrator Sordo Gomez to
breathe new life into the
fabulous melodies Tony had played
all those years ago in
Josephine's Gypsy Orchestra (will
we never be free of that woman).
It should come as no surprise
that Sordo Gomez is yet another
nom-de-plume for Tony Osborne!
On television, as well as 'Six
Five Special' he was associated
with the long-running 'Open
House', a 2-hour live show every
Saturday afternoon on the newly
launched BBC-2. He also worked
extensively on radio in the UK
including a couple of years
fronting the band on 'Listen to
this space' a comedy show
starring Nicholas Parsons and
Barry Cryer.
Towards the end of
the 1970s Tony started working
for several months each year on
P&O cruise liners. Initially
he fronted a small band which he
then reduced to a trio, until
finally he entertained on his own
at the piano. Always a reluctant
disciplinarian, Tony had grown
tired of having to keep an eye on
the other guys amorous and
alcoholic adventures on those
long cruises. "I loved
playing, but hated having to
worry whether the drummer would
turn up drunk, or the bass player
might get it into his head to
chat to the Captain's wife!"
he recalls. "So I decided to
go solo, which gave me just as
much pleasure with far less
pressure".
On one of those
cruises Tony met and fell in love
with Faye Morgan, one of
Australia's leading designers of
sporting and theatrical costumes.
They married, settled in Sydney
and Tony retired from the showbiz
merry-go-round, only to be
tempted back on very special
occasions.
Thus Tony came out
of retirement in the mid-1990s to
lead the last ever genuine Glenn
Miller Orchestra on a tour of
Australia, featuring the six
surviving members of the bands
led by Miller himself including
trumpet players John Best, Steve
Lipkins, and Zeke Zarchy, saxmen
Hank Freeman and Freddie Guerra
and singer Beryl Davis. Aged 74
Tony was the baby of
the band.
In 1997 Faye died
tragically young, leaving Tony
heartbroken. Although he was
approaching 80, he returned to
his first love, music.
Tony Osborne,
playing better than ever, can now
be found every weekend
entertaining at the piano at
Sydney's Clontaf Restaurant or
the Sydney Yacht Club. The
punters know little of their
pianist's illustrious background,
but what they do know is that
hes the best pianist in
town.
"I love
playing so much that Id do
it for nothing" says Tony,
"but for God's sake
dont ever tell the
management I said that".
Tony Osborne died
in Australia on 1 March 2009 aged
86.
David Ades
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