George
Melachrino was born in London, England. As a young boy, he had a love of music.
At the age of five, he began composing and by the age of fourteen he enrolled
in the Trinity College of Music. In 1927, he began his career by singing and
playing at the Savoy Hill Studios in London. For the next twelve years, he played
in many different bands and orchestras. In the 1930s, Melachrino started
working for bands led by Ambrose singing and playing saxophone with Carroll
Gibbons at the Savoy Hotel London, and Bert Firman, and started playing on
radio for the BBC. By 1939, he started his own band and secured a contract at
the Café de Paris. He joined the Army a year later, and received training at
the Corps of Military Police where he became a P.T. Instructor. Melachrino also
gained experience as a military musician at the Army Broadcasting Department,
as Musical Director for the recording of entertainment for overseas forces,
leading the British Band of the Allied Expeditionary Forces and the Orchestra
Khaki. After the war, in 1945, he formed the George Melachrino Orchestra, an
orchestra that became synonymous with lush string arrangements. From 1945 to
1947, he conducted for Richard Tauber in most of his Parlophone recordings and
BBC broadcasts.
In
1956, his orchestra's track "Autumn Concerto" reached number 18 in
the UK Singles Chart, and remained in the chart for nine weeks.
Melachrino
frequently performed on BBC and American Armed Forces Radio. George Melachrino & His Orchestra - Starlight Roof Waltz
Geen opmerkingen:
Een reactie posten