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Ron Grainer

 
Artist: Ron Grainer

Formal Connection With:

Ronald Millar
  • Active: '60s, '70s
  • Genres: Soundtrack
  • Instrument: Arranger, Producer, Performer
  • Representative Albums: "Doctor Who and Other Classic Ron Grainer Themes," "The Omega Man," "The Prisoner"

Biography

Ron Grainer was something of a fixture in pop music in England during the 1960s, and as a composer at least two of his creations -- the title theme from Doctor Who and the title theme for The Prisoner -- remain known to millions of people around the world, decades after his death. Born in Queensland, Australia, he started playing the violin at age four and subsequently took up the piano. After studying at the Sydney Conservatory of Music, he decided to go to England to pursue a career in classical music, but once there he found himself sidetracked into popular music. His skills as a pianist placed him in great demand as an accompanist, to homegrown talent and also to visiting singers such as Guy Mitchell, Frankie Laine, and Billy Eckstine, among others.

It was from his work as an accompanist and rehearsal pianist with the BBC that led to his first engagement as a composer, of music for plays presented by the radio and television service. That, in turn, led Grainer to his first assignment in scoring a regular television series, Maigret, based on the books by Georges Simenon, the title music from which -- utilizing an array of then little-heard, archaic instruments, including the harpsichord and the clavichord -- became a hit composition and earned Grainer the first of three Ivor Novello Awards for his work in popular music. With that success behind him, Grainer was suddenly in heavy demand as a television composer, and his later successes included Comedy Playhouse and Steptoe and Son, the latter one of the most important and influential British comedies of the 1960s, which also earned Grainer his second Novello Award. He also moved into film scoring and into producing rock & roll music at approximately this same time. By sheer chance, he discovered an instrumental rock & roll band from Bristol called the Eagles -- not to be confused with the California-based outfit of the next decade -- whom he got signed to Pye Records and produced for the next couple of years.

He also put them into a 1962 juvenile delinquency drama called Some People, which Grainer was scoring. The soundtrack included a song entitled "Some People," which was released as a single by the Eagles (with singer Valerie Mountain on the vocals) as well as a handful of other artists. The Eagles' rendition was the most interesting, however, displaying the composer's penchant for unusual sounds, including a break played on a calliope -- the latter, in fact, was sort of the good-natured antecedent to the ocarina break on the Troggs' "Wild Thing." With his penchant for unusual sounds, Grainer could easily have been a competitor to the likes of Joe Meek, but he never pursued pop music activity, as television and movie soundtracks -- at which he was already proficient and writing profitably -- held his attention from 1964 onward. Grainer's first crack at musical immortality came in 1963 when he was assigned to write the music for a new science fiction/adventure series entitled Doctor Who. Grainer went to town on this title theme, indulging his taste for unusual instrumentation to the fullest -- it was a mysterious yet exciting piece of music made up of what seemed like unearthly sounds, most notably the Ondes Martinot, a close cousin to the theremin, and it remained the title theme (with updates in the arrangement) for the quarter-century run of the series. It's still so familiar in the 21st century that its opening bars are instantly recognizable.

Grainer continued writing film and television music for the next decade, and showed a unique ability to absorb and assimilate the characteristics of the changing popular music around him. His main title theme for the espionage/adventure series Man in a Suitcase was thoroughly in his own style, but it also displayed characteristics resembling the Beatles' "Good Day Sunshine" and the Tremeloes' "Suddenly You Love Me." His big triumph, however, was the title theme to The Prisoner -- ironically, his proposed music was initially rejected by creator/star Patrick McGoohan, until he speeded it up. Coupling romping horns, jangling electric guitar, and a relentless beat, it was a striking opening to the 17 episodes of the series, and was even quoted in an homage to the series in an episode of The Simpsons 30 years later, and Grainer himself reused the same thematic material in his score for the science fiction thriller The Omega Man (1971). Grainer's health had been an issue since the early '60s, when his eyesight had begun failing. In the early '70s, he developed further vision problems and left his career behind for several years' rest. He returned to composing at the end of the 1970s, most notably on the Roald Dahl-inspired series Tales of the Unexpected. He passed away early in 1981 of complications from spinal cancer. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
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Actor: Ron Grainer
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  • Active: '60s-'70s
  • Major Genres: Comedy, Drama
  • Career Highlights: To Sir, With Love, Steptoe and Son, The Omega Man
  • First Major Screen Credit: A Kind of Loving (1962)

Biography

Ron Grainer was a top composer in British television and films from the 1960s through the early '80s, and along the way wrote the classic themes for the series Doctor Who and The Prisoner. Born in Queensland, Australia, he was a music prodigy as a child, taking up the violin at the age of four and later the piano as well. In his early twenties, Grainer attended the Sydney Conservatory of Music, studying under Sir Eugene Goosens, and later moved to England. It was his intention to pursue a career as a classical composer, but he was sidetracked into popular music when he found employment as a pianist, playing accompaniment to such visiting talent as Guy Mitchell and Frankie Laine. Grainer made his first recordings as an accompanist to various singers. Eventually, his work as an accompanist and rehearsal pianist led to his engagement at the BBC, and Grainer became a composer for television plays. Grainer's first assignment in series television came in 1960, when he was engaged to write the music for the series Maigret. By that time, his interest in music had drawn him to various outré and archaic instruments, such as the Ondes Martenot (a close cousin to the theremin), and he employed the unusual timbre of a harpsichord and clavichord to score the series. Grainer's scoring and title music were sufficiently distinctive to get him his first record release, and a cover of the theme by Joe Loss that made the U.K. Top 20, while Grainer won the Ivor Novello Award for the theme music.

Grainer subsequently saw releases of his music for Comedy Playhouse and Steptoe and Son, and the latter was widely covered in England, in addition to getting him a second Novello award. During this period, Grainer also took a Bristol-based rock & roll group called the Eagles -- not to be confused with the California-based country-rock band of the early '70s -- under his wing. He got them a contract with Pye Records, to which he'd been signed in 1961, and produced and wrote compositions for them. The band contributed to the scoring of Some People (1962), a juvenile delinquency drama starring Kenneth More and a young David Hemmings. From 1963 onward, Grainer divided his time between television and movie work, including John Schlesinger's A Kind of Loving (1962) and Richard Lester's The Mouse on the Moon (1963). In 1963, he also composed one of his most enduringly popular television themes, for the new sci-fi adventure series Doctor Who. The music, with its pulsing electronic textures and theremin-like oscillations, became one of the most popular in the history of British television, and a fixture in British popular culture for decades to come. Grainer also began writing for the theater in this period, starting with Robert and Elizabeth, which got him his third Novello award. He was absent from television during this period, but returned to the small screen in 1967 with the title themes for two new ITC-produced series, Man in a Suitcase and The Prisoner. The former had the characteristics of a pop/rock song, though it was an instrumental, whereas the latter was suffused with jangly electric guitar parts and romping brass and horns, and quite unlike any mainstream action series theme ever heard before. Grainer was drawn back to feature films that year with To Sir, With Love (1967), which led to further movie work, on The Assassination Bureau and Lock Up Your Daughters! (both 1969).

Grainer's career advanced rapidly in the early part of the next decade, highlighted by his work on Boris Sagal's The Omega Man (1971), which featured a revision of his music for The Prisoner. Ever since the early '60s, Grainer had suffered from seriously deteriorating eyesight, which worsened in the early '70s. In recognition of his declining health, Grainer took a break from composing, leaving England for a respite in Portugal. He was back in the second half of the 1970s with a commission for a new series entitled Tales of the Unexpected (1979) for Thames Television, and closed out his career with a string of compositions for the BBC. Grainer's health declined over the next year as he manifested cancer of the spine that ultimately took his life in early 1981. In the decades since, Grainer's reputation has grown, with the repeated use and reruns of this themes from Doctor Who and The Prisoner enhancing his visibility, in tandem with the issue of various soundtrack CDs for both series. Additionally, in the early 21st century, a limited edition release of his score for The Omega Man was an instant sell-out from its distributor. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
Wikipedia: Ron Grainer
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Ron Grainer

Background information
Birth name Ron Grainer
Born 11 August 1922(1922-08-11)
Atherton, Queensland, Australia
Died 21 February 1981 (aged 58)
Cuckfield, Sussex, England
Occupations Composer

Ron Grainer (11 August 1922 — 21 February 1981) was an Australian-born composer who worked for most of his professional career in the United Kingdom. He is mostly remembered for his film and television music.

Contents

Biography

Grainer was born in Atherton, Queensland, Australia. He studied music under Sir Eugene Goosens at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music, but this was interrupted by World War II. He was enlisted to the Australian Army and was injured, almost losing a leg.

In Britain from the 1950s, Grainer collaborated with the BBC Radiophonic Workshop on a number of television series themes, including Giants of Steam (a documentary about railways) and, most famously, in 1963 on the science fiction series Doctor Who. Grainer was so impressed with Delia Derbyshire's electronic realisation of his score (which remained the standard version of the Doctor Who theme for 18 years) that he is reputed to have said on hearing it, "Did I really write that?"[1]. He also offered to split his royalty with her, but this was prevented by BBC bureaucracy.

Grainer composed the music for a number of ITC series, including Man in a Suitcase and The Prisoner, the latter based upon an earlier piece of music he had written entitled The Age of Elegance.

Perhaps one of his most eclectic film works was the music to The Omega Man, based upon the book I Am Legend by Richard Matheson and starring Charlton Heston. The soundtrack was not released on CD until 2002 in a limited run of 3000 copies through FilmScoreMonthly[2]. Copies appear on eBay from time to time, but it is now considered a rarity. It was remastered and given a general release in 2008. The music contains a mix of symphonic, jazz, avant garde and electronic music. However, it has been noted that the theme music and incidental music seemed remarkably similar to that of "The Prisoner", but with alternate notes removed. A compilation LP album, The Exciting Television Music of Ron Grainer, appeared in 1980. In 1994, a CD comprising of 30 TV and film themes composed by Grainer, The A To Z Of British TV Themes - The Ron Grainer Years, was released by Play It Again.

One of Grainer's later themes, Tales of the Unexpected, was also to become famous. The light, slightly mocking theme became a hallmark of the series.

Grainer was married twice, first to Margot (one stepdaughter) and later to Jennifer (one son), who he divorced in 1976. Grainer died from spinal cancer in Cuckfield, Sussex, England aged 58. His second wife was at his side.

Notable television credits

Notable film credits

Stage credits

References

External links


 
 
Learn More
The Doctor Who 25th Anniversary Album (1988 Album by Original Soundtrack)
Some People [EP] (1962 Album by Original Soundtrack)
Dr. Who [Original Television Soundtrack] (2007 Album by Murray Gold)

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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
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Ron Grainer" Read more

 

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