Robert Farnon
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Robert Joseph Farnon (July 24, 1917 – April 22, 2005) was a Canadian-born composer, conductor, musical arranger and trumpet player.
[edit] Life
Born in Toronto, Ontario, he was commissioned as a Canadian Army captain 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, eventually moving to live in Guernsey, Channel Islands with his wife and children.
He was considered by his peers as 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 Andre 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.
[edit] Works
Robert Farnon is probably best known for two famous pieces of light music, Jumping Bean and Portrait of a Flirt, both which were originally released as 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 RN (1951) and for a number of television series and miniseries including The Prisoner and A Man Called Intrepid.
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 debute 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.
[edit] External links
Categories: 1917 births | 2005 deaths | Canadian composers | Canadian conductors | English composers | Film score composers | Light music composers | English conductors | British music arrangers | People from Toronto | Ontario musicians | Guernsey | Arrangers for Frank Sinatra | Arrangers for Sarah Vaughan | Arrangers for Bing Crosby