William Henry (Debroy) Somers (1890-1952) was a British lyricist,
composer, musical arranger and band leader.
Multi-instrumentalist and bandleader William Henry Somers
was born in Dublin, Ireland, on April 11, 1890. The son of a band sergeant in
the First Gloucestershire Regiment, he learned music at the Chelsea Military
Academy and studied piano with Michele Esposito at the Royal Irish Academy of
Music in 1904. Somers moved to London in 1910; the following year he enlisted
in the Royal Irish Rifles, Second Battalion, and specialized on the oboe at the
Royal Military School of Music.
After surviving the Great War, Somers withdrew from military
service, returned to London, and became chief arranger and director of light
music for the Aeolian/Vocalion company, participating in his first recording
sessions as conductor of the Vocalion Dance Orchestra and the Venetian Dance
Orchestra. In 1919 Somers decided to begin calling himself "Debroy."
(The exact reason for this name change is open to conjecture; some say he
wanted to identify with a black jazz musician named "DeBroy." The
name is not uncommon in India; it appears, like Somers, to have originated in
Ireland.)
Somers next worked as arranger and musical advisor for the
visiting Bert Ralton & His New York Havana Band at London's Savoy Hotel.
When Ralton returned to New York, Somers assumed full leadership of this ensemble
and then formed the considerably larger Savoy Hotel Orpheans in 1923. The
Orpheans, featuring the Starita brothers, banjoist Pete Mandel, and violinist
Jean Lensen, played the London Hippodrome, performed over the radio, and made
phonograph recordings for the competing Columbia and HMV/Plum labels. Riding a
crest of popularity, the band hit the road for a national tour (as Debroy
Somers & His Orchestra) and settled into a pattern of regular appearances
at the Alhambra and the London Coliseum.
In April 1926 Somers left the Orpheans to concentrate on
writing arrangements. By the beginning of 1927 he was leading his own dance
band under his own name, and had permanently crossed over to become a Columbia
recording artist. Somers' biggest hits for that label during this period were a
pastiche of themes from Sigmund Romberg's The Desert Song and an adaptation of
Tchaikovsky's First Piano Concerto as well as medleys of Christmas songs and
popular American ditties. During the 1930s, Debroy Somers & His Orchestra
broadcast on both Radio Luxembourg and its competitor Radio Normandy, where
they were sponsored by the Horlicks malted milk mix company.
...
Somers and band appeared in numerous motion pictures, including Picadilly (1929), Royal Cavalcade (1935), and Stars on Parade (1936). Somers also composed music used in the film Rose of Tralee (1936). Although the Debroy Somers recording band ceased to exist in 1941, the leader remained active throughout the 1940s conducting theatre and dance ensembles; he presided over The Lisbon Story at the Hippodrome in 1943 and Latin Quarter, a revue staged at the London Casino in 1949 involving a pit orchestra, 16 additional violinists, and three rumba bands, one of which was stationed in the lobby.
Somers worked as staff arranger and conductor for Columbia Records until his death at the age of 62 from a cerebral haemorrhage in St. George's Hospital in Knightsbridge, London, on May 16, 1952. (Info from AMG)
2 comments:
For “Debroy Somers & His Orchestra -Night Time Brings Sweet Dreams Of You” go here:
http://www60.zippyshare.com/v/sgbKqiO4/file.html
01. Night Time Brings Sweet Dreams Of You
02. Doll Dance
03. Red Roofed Chalet
04. Carolina Moon
05. Ro Ro Rolling Along
06. Elizabeth
07. Tell Me I'm Forgiven
08. Irving Berlin Waltz Songs: What'll I Do?/Always/Marie/All ...
09 The Peanut Vendor
10. Dixieland : Introduction/Whistling Rufus/Alexander's ...
11. The Night When Love Was Born
12. They All Start Whistling Mary
13. Isn't It Romantic
14. My Heart's To Let
15. Lover
16. Lucky Break : I'd Like to Know/Lucky Break/Turn-Turn-Turn
17. She Wore A little Jacket Of Blue
18. Mr And Mrs Is The Name
19. West End Nights – Vocal Gems: Gay Deceivers Medley: You Are Me/Serenade
20. There's A New World
21. Goodnight Lovely Little Lady
Post a Comment