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Robert Farnon

 
Artist: Robert Farnon
  • Period: Contemporary (1950- )
  • Country: Canada/England
  • Born: July 24, 1917 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada
  • Died: April 23, 2005 in Guersney, England

Biography

Robert Farnon as a composer of light classical and "mood music," is a rival to figure such as Eric Coates, David Rose, and Percy Faith. He has also been notably successful in the field of film music since the 1940's.

Robert Joseph Farnon was born into a musical family in Toronto, Canada in 1917. He showed a natural aptitude as a musician, and at age 19 was already being employed as an arranger with the Canadian Broadcasting Company Orchestra in Toronto, under the direction of Percy Faith. Farnon succeeded Faith as director of the orchestra when Faith departed Canada for America.

Farnon's main interest at the time lay in writing serious music, despite the fact that he enjoyed great success with his arrangements. At age 22, he composed his first symphony, which was performed by the Toronto Symphony in 1941, and later by the Philadelphia Orchestra. A second symphony followed a year later, and it, too, received performances in Canada, but Farnon discovered that he had little personal affinity for writing works of that depth and dimension, talented though he might have been.

It was during his service with the Canadian army during World War II, when he was assigned as a band leader and sent to England, that Farnon discovered the light classical music of composers such as Charles Williams and Eric Coates. This was something of a revelation to him--their brand of music was internally complex while not overly profound, inventive and expressive without being pretentious. Their work became something of the model upon which he chose to build his career as a composer, and that brand of light classical music led naturally, in turn, to film composition.

Farnon made his career in England after the war, writing mood music for Chappell Music, a task at which he was eminently successful, his music not only popular in the broadcasts for which it was intended, but also entering the repertory of numerous pops orchestras in England and around the world. Farnon soon entered the field of film music as well, writing his first score in 1948 for the upper-class romantic comedy Spring In Park Lane, produced by Herbert Wilcox, and the music for its direct sequel Maytime In Mayfair.

In 1951, Farnon was assigned to write the score for his first major international film, Captain Horatio Hornblower, based on the exploits of C.S. Forrester's naval hero of the Napoleonic era, starring Gregory Peck. A Warner Bros. British production directed by legendary action filmmaker Raoul Walsh, and starring Gregory Peck, Hornblower was a hit around the world and remains, as an oft-revived and telecast film, Farnon's best known screen work as well, virtually his magnum opus. He subsequently had assignments for films such as Gentlemen Marry Brunettes and the screen adaptation of The Little Hut, which left relatively little impression on the public as films. In the 1960's, his screen assignments included some slightly higher profile work, such as the music for the Hayley Mills film The Truth About Spring and also the all-star western adventure drama Shalako.

Farnon has remained a top composer in his field for 50 years. In addition to his film scores, his popular instruments include "How Beautiful Is Night," "Journey Into Melody," "Pictures in the Fire," "Westminster Waltz," and "A Promise of Spring." In addition to its melodic content, Farnon's music is noted for its deceptively complex internal structure, which makes it as interesting as it is attractive. A quiet, self-effacing man, without the gift for self-promotion that rivals such as Percy Faith or David Rose ever showed, Farnon has never had a high-visibility creative role, preferring to work quietly and show himself through his work. In 1992, Reference Recordings issued a CD of Farnon conducting his own concert pieces and a suite derived of the Captain Horatio Hornblower score. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide

Discography

Robert Farnon and His Orchestra: Flirtation Walk / Presenting Robert Farnon and His Orchestra

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Actor: Robert Farnon
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  • Born: 1917 in Canada
  • Died: Apr 23, 2005 in Guernsey, England, UK
  • Active: '40s-'70s
  • Major Genres: Comedy, Musical
  • Career Highlights: Captain Horatio Hornblower, The Sheriff of Fractured Jaw, The Little Hut
  • First Major Screen Credit: Just William's Luck (1947)

Biography

Canadian-born composer Robert Farnon came to film composition in England after nearly a decade spent establishing himself as a serious composer in the concert hall, interrupted by army service. By the second half of the '40s, he'd moved into light classical music and soon after joined the British film industry with his score for the Val Guest-directed comedy Just William's Luck (1947), a low-budget production distributed by United Artists and intended primarily for British audiences. He then moved up to Herbert Wilcox's more elegant productions such as Maytime in Mayfair, and in 1951 scored his first major international release, the British Warner Bros. production of Captain Horatio Hornblower, starring Gregory Peck. From that point on, for most of the next decade, he usually had one film assignment a year, many of them comedies such as Gentlemen Marry Brunettes, The Little Hut, and Expresso Bongo. His movie scores tended to be highly melodic and usually had at least one big sweeping theme to carry them, along with elegant and clever orchestrations. Farnon's film work slackened off during the '60s, and he moved into working in the adventure genre with The Truth About Spring (1965) and Shalako (1968). His most widely seen and heard scores of the '70s dated from the end of the decade and were done for television productions of A Man Called Intrepid and Mary and Joseph: A Story of Faith. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: Robert Farnon
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Robert Joseph Farnon (July 24, 1917 – April 23, 2005) was a Canadian-born composer, conductor, musical arranger and trumpet player.

Life

Born in Toronto, Ontario, he was commissioned as a captain in the Canadian Army and became the conductor/arranger of the Canadian Band of the allied expeditionary force sent overseas during World War II, which was the Canadian equivalent of the American Band of the AEF led by Major Glenn Miller.

At the end of the war, Farnon decided to make England his home, and he later moved to Guernsey in the Channel Islands with his wife and children.

He was considered by his peers the finest arranger in the world, and his talents influenced many composer-arrangers including Quincy Jones, all of whom acknowledge his contributions to their work. Conductor André Previn called him "the greatest writer for strings in the world."

Robert Farnon died at the age of eighty-seven at a hospice near his home of forty years in Guernsey. He was survived by his wife Patricia and their five children.

Works

Robert Farnon is probably best known for two famous pieces of light music, Jumping Bean and Portrait of a Flirt, which were originally released as the A and B sides on the same 78. Also famous are his Westminster Waltz and A Star is Born.

Farnon also wrote the music for more than forty motion pictures including Maytime in Mayfair (1949) and Captain Horatio Hornblower R.N. (1951) and for a number of television series and miniseries including The Prisoner, Secret Army, Colditz, and A Man Called Intrepid.

In 1962 Farnon arranged and conducted Frank Sinatra's only album recorded outside of the United States, Sinatra Sings Great Songs from Great Britain.

He won four Ivor Novello Awards including one for "Outstanding Services to British Music" in 1991 and in 1996 he won the Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Arrangement for "Lament" performed by J. J. Johnson & his Robert Farnon Orchestra.

The last piece he composed was titled The Gaels: An American Wind Symphony, as a commission to the Roxbury High School band in honor of the school's mascot, the gael. The piece made its world debut in May 2006. It was performed by the Roxbury High School Honors Wind Symphony under the direction of Dr. Stanley Saunders, a close friend of Farnon.

Farnon was first married to Joanne Dallas the talented singer from the AEF band which performed in London during the war years. Jazz trumpet was Robert Farnon's first love. His long time friend Dizzy Gillespie once stated that he was pleased that Farnon took up composing, arranging and conducting as Robert was the better jazz trumpeter.

External links


 
 
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Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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