Thursday, 12 January 2023

Harry Roy born 12 January 1900


Harry Roy (12 January 1900 – 1 February 1971) was a British dance band leader and clarinet player from the 1920s to the 1960s. 

Roy was born Harry Lipman in Stamford Hill, London, England, and as a teenager he worked in his father's carton manufactory and began to study clarinet and alto saxophone at the age of 16. He and his brother Sidney formed a band which they called the Darnswells, with Harry on saxophone and clarinet and Sidney on piano. During the 1920s, they performed in several prestige venues, such as the Alhambra and the London Coliseum, under names such as the Original Lyrical Five and the Original Crichton Lyricals. They spent three years at the Café de Paris, and toured South Africa, Australia and Germany. 

The now Anglicized "Roys" waxed a test pressing for Columbia in 1922 and made their first issued recordings for Vocalion in 1927 as the Crichton Lyricals. The Lyricals played all of the best halls and clubs in London, visited Paris, then toured Australia, Tasmania, and South Africa in 1928. They cut two sides for the Broadcast label in 1929 and visited Berlin in 1930, providing live entertainment and making a few more phonograph records. Harry was a born showman, comedian, and vocalist who specialized in songs like "I Wonder How I Look When I'm Asleep?" 


                             

Over the next few years their music became available to the public on the Guardsman, Coliseum, Aco, Scala, Crown, Beltona, Imperial, and Crystalate record labels. By the early 1930s, Harry Roy was fronting the band under his own name, and broadcasting from the Café Anglais and the Mayfair Hotel. In 1931, he wrote (along with Anthony Fanzo) and sang "Pussy", which has since been the subject of many cover versions and remakes. 

Harry became the leader of a new enlarged version of the band in 1931, with Syd assuming managerial duties. The Harry Roy Orchestra spent half a year serenading patrons before and betwixt motion picture screenings at RKO's Leicester Square Theatre, opened at the London Pavillion in 1932, and broadcast over BBC radio from the Café Anglais in 1933. Their theme song was now established as the "Bugle Call Rag." Roy's band distinguished itself at the Mayfair Hotel in 1934 and remained there until 1936. 

In 1935, he married Elizabeth Brooke (stage name: Princess Pearl), daughter of the White Rajah of Sarawak, with whom he appeared in two musical films, Everything Is Rhythm (1936) and Rhythm Racketeer (1937). Appearing in the former film were Roy's two pianists, Ivor Moreton and Dave Kaye. They had originally been part of Harry Roy's Tiger Ragamuffins, a smaller outfit composed of members of the main band, which also included drummer Joe Daniels. Moreton and Kaye left Roy's band in early 1936, going on to a successful career as piano duettists in their own right. 

Harry Roy's Orchestra enjoyed a successful tour of South America in 1938 and toured consistently throughout England and the Middle East during the Second World War with the Tiger Ragamuffins.  During 1940 another risqué piece of dance band hilarity was recorded by Rot. The song “She Had to Go and Lose It at the Astor.” Both the BBC and the American Society of Composers, Authors & Publishers banned it from being recorded or published. In 1942 he was at the Embassy Club and a little later, toured the Middle East, entertaining troops with singer Mary Lee. In 1948, Roy travelled to the United States, but was refused a work permit. Returning to Britain, he reformed his band and scored a hit with his recording of "Leicester Square Rag". 

By the early 1950s, the big band era had come to an end. Roy's band split up, but he still drifted in and out of the music scene. In the 1950s, he ran his own restaurant, the Diners' Club, but it was destroyed by fire. In 1969 Roy returned to music, leading a quartet in London's Lyric Theatre's show Oh Clarence and his own Dixieland Jazz Band resident during the summer at the newly-refurbished Sherry's Dixieland Showbar in Brighton, but he was by then in failing health. He died in London 2 February 1971. 

 (Edited from Wikipedia & AllMusic)

4 comments:

  1. For “Harry Roy Featuring Harry Roy's Tiger-Ragamuffins
    – Shoot That Tiger (1997 Vocalion) “ go here:

    https://www.imagenetz.de/gqxXL

    Harry Roy Medley (5:12)
    1.a Bugle Call Rag
    1.b Twelfth Street Rag
    1.c Tiger Rag
    1.d Somebody Stole My Girl
    1.e Nobody’s Sweetheart
    2 Goody Goody 2:48
    3 Diddle Dum Dee 2:54
    4 The Man From Harlem 3:00
    5 Chinatown, My Chinatown / Limehouse Blues 2:57
    6 Casa Loma Stomp 3:03
    Fox Trot Medley (2:57)
    7.a Jealous
    7.b Whispering
    7.c Poor Butterfly
    8 Is It True What They Say About Dixie? 2:34
    9 Cuban Pete 3:12
    10 Nobody's Sweetheart 3:06
    11 Bugle Call Rag 2:45
    12 Tiger Rag 2:39
    13 Canadian Capers 2:48
    Gershwin Medley (3:05)
    14.a Fascinating Rhythm
    14.b Clap Yo’ Hands
    14.c That Certain Feeling
    15 Let's Call The Whole Thing Off 2:41
    16 They Can't Take That Away From Me 2:53
    17 Rita The Rumba 3:15
    18 Boo Hoo 3:13
    19 Sing Baby Sing 2:36
    20 Bye Bye Baby 2:37
    21 Where Did Robinson Crusoe Go With Friday On A Saturday Night? 3:02
    Harry Roy Stage Show (3:23)
    22.a Bugle Call
    22.b Tiger Rag
    22.c Knock, Knock Who’s There
    22.d Alone (By Audience)
    Harry Roy Stage Show (3:27)
    23.a Intro: Sarawacki
    23.b St. Louis Blues
    23.c Piano Madness
    23.d Somebody Stole My Gal

    Recorded 1933-37

    ReplyDelete
  2. Here’s a 50 track compilation from various digital albums that I put together.

    For “Harry Roy – Dance Band Maestro (2023 From The Vaults)” go here:

    https://workupload.com/file/TAneDwes9Fq

    01) Harry Roy and His Band - Music Maestro Please
    02) Harry Roy - Goody Goody
    03) Harry Roy & His Band - Sweet Little Sweetheart myfreemp3.vip
    04) Harry Roy and His Band - Margie
    05) Harry Roy and His Band - There Goes That Song Again
    06) Harry Roy & His Band - Corn Silk
    07) Harry Roy and His Band - Build a Little Home (1)
    08) Harry Roy & His Band - Shake Down The Stars myfreemp3.vip
    09) Harry Roy Orchestra - Harbor Lights
    10) Harry Roy & His Band - La Cucaracha
    11) Harry Roy & His Band - Learn To Croon
    12) Harry Roy & His Band - Nobody-'s Sweetheart
    13) Harry Roy - It's Funny To Everyone But Me
    14) Harry Roy & His Band - Struttin-' With Some Barbeque
    15) Harry Roy - I Can T Give You Anything but Love myfreemp3.vip
    16) Harry Roy & His Band - Rosita
    17) Harry Roy and His Band - Drummer Boy
    18) Harry Roy & His Band - The Continental
    19) Harry Roy - They Can-'t Black out the Moon
    20) Harry Roy & His Band - Wah de Dah
    21) Harry Roy & His Band - You Are My Sunshine
    22) Harry Roy - Keep an Eye on Your Heart
    23) Harry Roy - Tumbling Tumbleweeds
    24) Harry Roy - Heigh-Ho!
    25) Harry Roy - Keep Young And Beautiful
    26) Harry Roy and His Band - Tzigane Swing
    27) Harry Roy & His Band - Down Argentina Way
    28) Harry Roy - She Had to Go and Lose It at the Astor
    29) Harry Roy & His Orchestra - No Name Rag
    30) Harry Roy and His Band - South American Joe
    31) Harry Roy and His Band - Waiting for the Train to Come In
    32) Harry Roy And His Orchestra - A Man And His Drum
    33) Harry Roy - My Girl's Pussy
    34) Harry Roy and His Band - Piano Madness
    35) Harry Roy – Temptation Rag
    36) Harry Roy - Lullaby of Broadway
    37) Harry Roy and His Band - That Lovely Weekend
    38) Harry Roy & His Band - It-'s Always You
    39) Harry Roy and His Band - Kindergarten Conga
    40) Harry Roy - Steppin Out At Midnight
    41) Harry Roy and His Band - Spanish Shawl
    42) Harry Roy and His Band - Lime House Blues
    43) Harry Roy - The Lady Who Didn-'t Believe In Love
    44) Harry Roy - Kiss Me Hello
    45) Harry Roy And His Orchestra - Home Again Blues
    46) Harry Roy and His Band - Avalon
    47) Harry Roy & His Band - Chatanooga Choo Choo
    48) Harry Roy & His Band - Here You Are
    49) Harry Roy and His Band - There Are Such Things
    50) Harry Roy & His Orchestra - Bugle Call Rag

    ReplyDelete
  3. Boppinbob, these are absolutely wonderful sets of music and I will be playing them for a long time. You continue to uncover so much music which would probably have remained lost to us. Long may you bop on.

    ReplyDelete