Frank Chacksfield (9 May 1914 – 9 June 1995) was an English
pianist, organist, composer and conductor of popular light orchestral easy
listening music, who had great success in Britain and internationally in the
1950s and early 1960s.
Francis Charles Chacksfield was born in Battle, East Sussex,
and as a child learned to play piano and organ. He appeared at Hastings Music
Festivals by the time he was 14, and then became deputy church organist at
Salehurst. After working for a short period in a solicitor's office he decided
on a career in music, and by the late 1930s, led a small band at Tonbridge in
Kent. At the beginning of World War II, he joined the Royal Corps of Signals,
and, following a radio broadcast as a pianist, was posted to ENSA at Salisbury
where he became the arranger for Stars in Battledress, an armed forces
entertainment troupe, and shared an office with comedian Charlie Chester.
After the war, he worked with Chester and on BBC Radio as an
arranger and conductor. He also worked as musical director for both Henry Hall
and Geraldo, and began recording under his own name in 1951 as "Frank
Chacksfield's Tunesmiths". In early 1953, he had his first top ten hit,
"Little Red Monkey", on the Parlophone label. This was a novelty
recording featuring Jack Jordan on the clavioline, and reportedly the first
record featuring an electronic instrument to feature on the UK pop chart.
He signed a recording
contract with Decca Records in 1953, and formed a 40-piece orchestra with a
large string section, the "Singing Strings". His first record release
for Decca, Charlie Chaplin's theme for his film Limelight, won him a gold disc
in the United States, and in the United Kingdom, where it reached No. 2 in the
UK Singles Chart, and won him the NME award as 'Record of the Year'. It spent
eight weeks at No. 2 (an all-time UK chart record), and in all thirteen weeks
in the top five chart positions, without dislodging Frankie Laine's, "I
Believe". His next 78 single, "Ebb Tide", became the first
British instrumental recording to reach No. 1 in some American charts,[which?] providing
a second gold disc, and he was voted the most promising new orchestra of the
year in the US.
He became one of Britain's best known orchestra leaders
internationally, and is estimated to have sold more than 20 million albums
worldwide. His material was "mood music", similar to that of Mantovani,
including ballads, waltzes, and film themes. In 1954,he began presenting a
series on BBC TV, which continued occasionally until the early 1960s.
Chacksfield was responsible for the musical arrangement of the first UK entry
into the Eurovision Song Contest 1957; "All" by Patricia Bredin. He
continued to write music, release singles and albums through the 1950s and
1960s, and appeared regularly on BBC radio.
He continued to record occasionally until the 1990s, from
the 1970s primarily on the Phase 4 label. He also developed business interests
in publishing and recorded for Starborne Productions, a company supplying
"canned music" for use by easy listening radio stations and others.
Many of these recordings were made commercially available in 2007. His last
album was Thanks for the Memories (Academy Award Winners 1934–55), released in
1991. Chacksfield died in Kent in 1995, after having suffered for several years
from Parkinson's disease. (Info edited from Wikipedia)
For “Frank Chacksfield – Sentimental Favourites” go here:
ReplyDeletehttp://www88.zippyshare.com/v/ukSFencD/file.html
01-Hello, Young Lovers (02:26)
02-On the Street Where You Live (02:38)
03-So in Love (02:37)
04-Stardust (01:54)
05-No Other Love (02:41)
06-I’ve Got My Love to Keep Me Warm (02:26)
07-Our Love Affair (02:42)
08-Days of Wine and Roses (03:20)
09-I’ve Got the World On A String (02:44)
10-How Soon (02:50)
11-Almost There (03:04)
12-Baubles, Bangles and Beads (03:04)
13-Hey There (03:41)
14-Smile (02:59)
15-Dream Lover (02:42)
16-Deep Purple (02:40)
17-The Man I Love (02:58)
18-Young At Heart (02:18)
19-They Didn’t Believe Me (02:39)
20-These Foolish Things (Remind Me of You) (03:03)
21-Moon River (03:20)
A big thank you to Instrumental Music Café blog for link