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On Sunday 22 January 1967, at 2.30pm, the BBC Light
Programme broadcast the first programme in a new series featuring
Robert Farnon conducting the Radio Orchestra : "Farnon in Concert".
Shortly before the first show, Robert Farnon gave a fascinating
interview to Crescendo, which was reprinted in Journal
Into Melody. Over 35 years later in 2003, we are pleased to
give our present-day members the opportunity to read what Bob had
to say.
Robert Farnon : talking about "Farnon in Concert",
and much more
Its a great pleasure to do this new weekly
BBC series, which I believe is going to be heard each Sunday until
the end of June. Im looking forward to its run. Actually,
I come over from my home in Guernsey every fortnight. On the Tuesday
we usually do all the script, because theres a lot of talking
throughout the programme, between the visiting composer, the guest
singer, the regular compere, John Dunn, and myself. We do most of
that work at Broadcasting House, and it is cut into the show later.
Then on the Wednesday, from 2.00 in the afternoon until 10 p.m.,
we record the music for one programme. On Thursday we do a second
complete show.
That allows me to be home for one full week, rather
than come over each week. Because the travellings a bit of
a bind, you know. If you have to make it every week, you just get
here, do your work, go home, spend one day and come back again.
Thats how it was with the previous series on BBC, and Im
glad that theyve been able to arrange it this way - thanks
to the producer, Vernon Lawrence.
I worked with the Radio Orchestra last year, when
we did two or three isolated programmes. Just occasionally I came
in, conducted the orchestra and brought a few arrangements. Prior
to that, I worked with the string section in a couple of programmes.
On the whole, its a first-class orchestra. And theyre
magnificent readers. They read this music just at sight - which
is a godsend when we have such limited rehearsal time.
The Radio Orchestra has some very good soloists
in it - the leader, violinist John Jezzard, Bobby Lamb (trombone),
Jimmy Chester (alto). An excellent Canadian tenor player - Art Ellefson.
And, of course, Malcolm Cecil on bass and Jackie
Dougan on drums are first-rate. Then we have Bobby Midgeley come
in for the afternoon session, playing all the extra percussion wonderfully
well. Individually, theres an awful lot of talent there. Collectively,
theyve been together long enough now to have some terrific
teamwork. Which you dont get in the session boys so much.
Sometimes you do - if the same four trombones or four trumpets arrive
at a date, but quite often it isnt so. I think the only real
difference is there are probably a few more virtuosos among session
players that do recordings and film work.
As a unit, this is a top-class light orchestra,
which can play almost any style of music. Weve done everything
from small Dixieland jazz and beat stuff up to a movement from Dvoraks
"New World" Symphony. Which isnt bad going, is it?
And everything you could think of in-between.
Its certainly a great help to know that there
are these outstanding jazz players in the orchestra. Then I can
dig into my library and say: "Well, yes, thisll come
off well, because it has a tenor solo, and weve got a terrific
tenor player in the band." Or "Heres a speciality
for the alto," or whatever. It helps me in programming the
music, to know what I can use.
As a matter of interest, Johnny Dankworth is going
to be a guest in one of the programmes, and Im writing a saxophone
piece for him. But I must mention something else here - this originated
from a suggestion by the producer, who thought it might be an idea
if I wrote a little thing for Johnny. And, funnily enough, Id
been starting a serious composition for another alto player, also
a fellow-Canadian, Bob Burns. But a major work - a saxophone concerto,
which will feature Bob playing tenor, alto and soprano. Hell
play one of these instruments on each of three movements.
I must say that the general standard of musicianship
in this country is very high. Right after the war, when I started
doing some vocal accompaniments at Decca and working with the Queens
Hall Light Orchestra, I found that the reading was absolutely staggering.
Id never come across musicians who could sightread so
well. Back home it would take us probably twice the time. And its
the same today.
Where American musicians tend to excel, I think,
is in interpretation. Also, most of the American bands we hear are
permanentlyorganised outfits, so they have more time to get
a good ensemble sound. Ted Heaths band, being permanent, got
a wonderful ensemble sound. But in session work, where were
going to do an album of jazz tunes, or whatever, we only have so
much time to get these things done. In other words, the brass or
saxophone section cant take the music away and wood-shed
it, as we call it, for half an hour - just get into a corner and
practice it, phrase it, change it and chop it about. As, say, Ted
Heaths band does - and the Americans.
Its always been my opinion that we could
get the same ensemble sound from the ordinary bands here. Teds
was not a soloists band (not later on, anyway) but it was
a great ensemble band. I remember, when I was with Geraldo, he allowed
us to have a rehearsal of up to three or four hours, just wood-shedding
one number. And, as a result, we got a great sound.
Being a perfectionist, Im seldom completely
happy about the sound. I think its a bit mean on my part -
I shouldnt be so selfish, always wanting everything to be
perfect.
As for being a conductor, I conduct because I like
conducting my own music. But Im not really mad about actually
conducting an orchestra. I much prefer writing. It was when I was
in my teens in Toronto that the writing gradually took hold. From
the time I was seven years old, I can remember music throughout
the family. My father was a violinist; my mother played piano. My
only sister was a jazz pianist, and my elder brother, Brian, was
in a college band when he was twelve. I was eleven or twelve when
I bought my first set of drums, just playing the bass drum and brass,
and played trumpet for many years.
What happened was: I was on drums with my brothers
band, and it was very difficult to find brass players. The tenor
saxophone player had an old cornet, which he gave to me as a present.
So I started studying it, and taking lessons and I liked it very
much. Then I used to play the second trumpet parts at the drums,
just playing the bass drum and hi-hat cymbal with my feet, leaving
my hands free to play the trumpet! In 1936 I joined the Canadian
Broadcasting Corporation, playing first trumpet for Percy Faiths
Orchestra. That was an entree for me, as far as writing was concerned,
because I used to do some arranging for Percy, too. He wasnt
a vocal writer at the time, and I did his choir arrangements for
him. When he left for America, I suppose I filled the gap, as it
were. I took over, formed an orchestra and did a lot of conducting
for CBC. But I would play as well. I didnt give up playing
until I came to Britain with the Canadian Army in 1944.
My original studies in writing were with a private
teacher named Louis Wiseman. He was a pupil at a school in Prague
at the same time as one of the Strauss family. A very good teacher,
though not a good composer. He taught me the harmony, the counterpoint
and the general theory of music. I took it over from there. And
I didnt write any popular music to speak of; I was just concerned
in writing serious music. I wrote a symphonette for orchestra, then
two symphonies and several orchestral works, an etude for trumpet,
some piano pieces - and this was all before I came over here. It
was when I was in Britain with the Canadian Band of the AEF that
I became more involved in the light music side. As the conductor
of a popular orchestra, which ours was, similar to those of Glenn
Miller and George Melachrino, I wasnt accented by the BBC
as a serious musician: I remember sending my Second Symphony score
to the BBC for review, and I never heard from them about it for
three years. Finally I discovered the score in a little office in
Shaftesbury Avenue, underneath a pile of manuscripts. It had been
there, gathering dust, for all that time. I was more or less advised
by the chap there that they didnt even look at it, because
it couldnt possibly be good if it was written by a jazz musician.
This is a strange attitude, but it is true. And
I think it still prevails today to a great extent. Ive written
one or two serious works recently: one is a "Rhapsody For Violin
And Orchestra", which has been played at the Festival Hall,
as well as all over Europe and in Canada. But, although its
been submitted to them, its never been played by the BBC Serious
Music Department at all. And thats today.
Apart from the BBC, I find the same unawareness
on the part of the symphony orchestras here, to whom my work has
been submitted, but who have not used it. Yet the symphony orchestras
abroad consider it worth including in their repertoire. My First
Symphony was played by the Philadelphia Orchestra under Eugene Ormandy.
So if its performed by one of the ten leading orchestras in
the world, it should be good enough for the BBC.
The AEF Band was a full aggregation, including
strings, but we didnt have the best players. During the war
the Canadian Army had several big entertainment units, and they
used to send, say, tenor twelve-piece groups out on the Continent
with a show. Some of them got up very close behind the lines. The
cream of the professional musicians of Canada were in these units.
And we were left in London with rather the second string of players.
Therefore, with our leading brass, woodwind and
string players out entertaining the troops, we had great difficulty
in competing with Miller - and Melachrino. But we had quite a good
orchestra, because we were working a 9 to 5 routine nearly every
day of the week. So what we lacked in skill, we made up for in ensemble
playing and drilled musicianship, I suppose.
Anyway, it served as a launching point for me here.
Of course, we were working in the BBC regularly and, shortly after
the war, the Corporation offered me a series along the lines of
the large orchestral music of the Canadian Army Band. That, incidentally,
was on a Sunday afternoon, as this one is. It was called Journey
Into Melody, and we followed it with another series, Melody
Hour. Now weve either come full circle, or were
turning the clock back 20 years - I dont know what. But were
doing the same thing, more or less, again. Though I think the styles
have changed a bit.
It would be interesting, perhaps, for some people
to know that a lot of the arrangements were playing in this
present series are the ones we played in the original series 18-20
years ago. Theyre not all new arrangements, by any means.
Unfortunately theres no budget for arranging
in the programme. Im just pulling the suitable ones out of
the book. And, according to the musicians, most of them still stand
up. Which is nice to know.
My associations with jazz and jazz musicians go
back to when I lived in Toronto. Of course, New York wasnt
very far away - just across the border. And we used to go over every
possible weekend and sit in with some of these boys, just for a
musical tonic. I first played with Dizzy Gillespie when he came
through Toronto with Cab Calloways band. We used to have jam
sessions afterwards and play like mad all night long, together with
Chu Berry on tenor and Cozy Cole on drums. Dizzy played straight
trumpet then - he didnt have it sticking up in the air. He
used to giggle when I played a jazz solo on cornet - hed always
played trumpet himself. In fact, I think its a nicer sound
than flugelhorn, easier to control, with a better tone.
I used to sit in and play jazz choruses at Mintons.
Also at a place called the Trianon in Buffalo, which is even closer
to Toronto. I used to work a 9 till 1 job at a Summer place near
Niagara Falls. Our way of relaxing after the job every night was
to nip over to Buffalo. It was only about an hours drive -
wed get back about 6.00 in the morning. At the Trianon, we
played with some very interesting fellows from the old Don Redman
Band, such as Jean Goldkette, Red Norvo and his brother, a drummer.
Reds wife, Mildred Bailey, was singing with the band. Those
were very happy salad days.
It was just filling my need to play jazz - that
was the only way to play it. Because there werent very many
jazz musicians in my home town at the time. Not like there is now
- we have Oscar Peterson in residence and, until recently, we also
had Ray Brown and Ed Thigpen. But we didnt then, so we had
to go over the border for our jazz.
Any interest evidenced by jazz people like Quincy
Jones in my present-day work doesnt have anything to do with
jazz, I dont think. Probably, they just like some of the arrangements
Ive done on record. Harmonically, more than anything else,
and perhaps the orchestral colours. I dont think they listen
much to the jazz side of it, because we dont play very much.
The orchestras we use are a little bit too large to play jazz. We
attempt it - to try to find that elusive combination of jazz and
symphonic. Its terribly difficult, but a lot of people - Johnny
Dankworth, John Lewis, Duke Ellington - are having a go, too. But
on a big scale, with the 60-piece Radio Orchestra that you hear
on Sundays, its not at all easy to move a band of that size
in a swinging arrangement. Occasionally, though, it does happen.
Quincy Jones was with Philips Records for quite
a long time, as an A and R man. We made about four or five albums
together, including the one with Sarah Vaughan. I directed the orchestra;
he was in the control room A and R-ing, as it were. I think that
contract resulted from the fact that my orchestral music appealed
to him. And he was interested in writing for the orchestra in that
way -for the straighter instruments and strings. Not just the jazz
side of it, which he had done for so many years. This, of course,
is what hes now putting into practice in his film scores.
Its surprising how many of these jazz boys
want to write for strings. I remember having a letter from Victor
Feldman, saying hed love to do some string writing, and asking
if Id give him a correspondence lesson or two. He sent over
some examples; I sent back corrections, and so on. We just did it
on a friendly basis, because were old pals, you know.
The same applied to Quincy. We used to have little
chewingthefat sessions, when he would ask about string
voicings and whatnot. Likewise the baritone player Sahib Shihab,
who lives in Denmark. We had some friendly little gettogethers
in Copenhagen. He would do a few bars, and wed talk about
it. And I think he learned more that way than he would trying to
find some book which would instruct him along the appropriate lines.
Writing for strings is quite an art
.
To write for strings well is quite an art, I believe.
A lot of people today are writing for strings the same way they
would write for saxophones. And it sounds that way, you know, rather
dull. They have one phrase for about eight bars with a big slur
marked over it. But a violin cant do that. Hell run
out of bow, even if the bow is 20 feet long. He couldnt phrase
that way.
In string writing, bowing is very important. That
is, whether its an up-bow, a down-bow, or whatever. It requires
a bit of study. So does the harp; thats a most complicated
instrument to write for.
Scoring for the straight woodwinds also calls for
a little bit of skill. If it lies well for the instrument, the player
will give it more, and it sounds better. If you put the part in
front of them, and all the bowing is marked, all the dynamics and
everything is there, it immediately sounds right on the first read-through.
And, of course, that makes a musician feel good, too - the fact
that he got through, perhaps, a difficult string piece the first
time. But he couldnt do that if the bowing was all upside-down.
It would make him look a bit of a Charlie, when hes not.
The string writing, I think, has had a lot to do
with the jobs Ive been asked to do. Because most of these
big dance bands-cum-string orchestras have rather uninteresting
things to play. Even Glenn Miller, when he had that magnificent
string section during the war - he didnt use it. They were
playing long notes all the time, instead of interesting string parts.
Writing for singers? Ive never enjoyed it
to any great extent. I like working with the orchestra by itself.
Ive written for many singers, and I dont ever remember
one side becoming a hit. I did string arrangements for Vera
Lynn till I was blue in the face, and never a hit. Then she decided
to get someone else, Roland Shaw, and the very first number he wrote
for her was a hit! I just didnt have any luck. Although the
Sarah Vaughan record came off. But that was almost orchestral writing,
anyway. We had the Danish choir, the orchestra, and Sarah herself
is like a musical instrument. Shes so intelligent; she listens
to the accompaniment and just weaves in like an ad lib tenor
or whatever.
As a matter of fact, Sinatra is like that, too.
He knows just where to slide in. But on our ill-fated album, into
which I put a lot of work, he just wasnt in very good voice.
Hed just returned from a world tour, and was doing concerts
at the Festival Hall each night. He, too, claimed that his voice
was tired. Therefore he wouldnt allow the record to be released
in America, because the singing would have done him more harm than
good. So he rested his voice after that, I think, and about five
or six months later he made an album, on which his singing was much
improved. Yes, it would be nice to do another one with him if its
not too late.
Tony Bennett and I have been trying to make an
album for years. Just recently he asked if I could come over to
New York to make one. And I couldnt, because I was just beginning
the BBC Farnon In Concert series.
Incidentally, Tony has recorded the floperoo Eurovision
Contest song that I wrote - "Country Girl". Apparently
its become quite a hit in America since its release there.
Hes also incorporated it into his act at the Copacabana, just
accompanied by a harpist; which would be interesting. Were
hoping to have him as a guest on the Sunday radio show, when he
comes over in May. So we might have a chance to hear his performance
of my song then.
But I havent done much songwriting - no talent
for it, really. "Country Girl" took me about three months
to write; it was a great struggle. I enjoyed doing it, but no one
should take that long writing a song, I dont think.
When it comes to arranging, even if its just
a pop song, I use the same form that I would for a serious work.
I have, more or less, an idea of the format of what Im going
to do with it, but I never know how it will develop. And I like
developing arrangements of any kind. They should be developed somewhere.
Otherwise, it could be just another stock printed arrangement. What
happens is: I lay out, say, a complete four- or five-line sketch
right from the beginning. Then, when you score it, thats the
joyful part. Adding the gingerbread. The hard, creative work has
been done in the sketch; you have your framework, as it were. Therefore,
you can sit back and its just like writing a letter; then
you add the different little colours and flourishes as you go along.
My approach to composition has always been the
same, really. I like to think its improved a bit, because
Im certainly learning every day. But I know what I like to
do. I still want to write serious music, because I enjoy it so much.
In 1962 I wrote two large orchestral works, one
to showcase Oscar Peterson and his Trio and one for Dizzy Gillespie,
which we were to record in Berlin. And I wanted to use six or seven
lead men from London, not being too familiar with the musicians
in Germany, to make sure that at least the leaders of each section
were going to carry us through. It was just as well I did, because,
although we found a wonderful string section over there, at that
time the brass and saxophone players werent too good. Theyre
much better now - at least there are more available.
However, the British men were informed by the Musicians
Union that, if they proceeded with this recording involving American
musicians, disciplinary action would be taken. And when Dizzy, Oscar
and Norman Granz, who was promoting this album for Verve, arrived
in Berlin, they each received telegrams from the American Federation
of Musicians. They all stood to be expelled from the Union if they
carried on with the project. Of course, that scrubbed the whole
thing.
The reason we went to Berlin was that, if it were
to be done in New York, it would cost the record company a fortune,
what with the travelling expenses and everything. We had about 75
musicians in one section of a movement, plus Oscars Trio.
Then plus Dizzy. Whereas the Union fees and general costs in Berlin
would be much lower.
So Norman wondered if we could do it in England,
but that wasnt possible, either. It was decided to shelve
it for the time being, and, if I came to New York later on, perhaps
they could do the Dizzy side of the album. Then the Oscar side at
another time, and spread the expense over like that.
Meanwhile, Dizzy and Oscar both joined other companies.
I joined Philips, who didnt allow me to work for another company,
because I was under exclusive contract. Eventually I got permission
to do the LP on Vervebut something else happened. Dizzy went
to the Far East, I think. Some situation always came along to stop
it materialising.
But I still hope we can do it some time. I might
even orchestrate it for a smaller combination. Perhaps that would
give us a chance, financially, to record it, without having to bring
in a gallery of strings. String players are very expensive these
days. Id certainly like to revise some of it. By now it would
be a dated work: its four years old.
I do think that jazz dates very quickly. It always
will, somehow. The same as improvisations in classical works; I
think they date. In the old days, concertos included a cadenza which
was to be improvised by the particular player. I imagine that, if
what he did then was played today by Rubinstein, it would sound
very dated. Anything thats improvised dates. Listening to
the Goodman band now, although its great and brilliant, it
sounds terribly corny to me, when you compare it with the swinging
arrangements they play today.
Some of the things they do in jazz today really
amaze me. Look at Dizzy - the way he has improved. When I used to
play with him, he was even worse than I was - dreadful player. But
now hes great, and Ive told him so. He often says: "Im
glad you gave up the cornet, man!"
When I played jazz, I didnt have the incredible
facility of, say, Al Hirt. I dont think anyone else did in
that era. In my opinion, the techniques in jazz have progressed
to such a fantastic degree of excellence that its almost impossible
to believe.
Footnote: Remember that Robert Farnon
gave this interview towards the end of 1966, and we have repeated
it here without any updating. Of course, we now know that he was
soon to achieve his wish of making some fine albums with Tony Bennett,
and that LP with Frank Sinatra is now far more highly regarded than
it was at the time.

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