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Malcolm Arnold

Sir Malcolm Henry Arnold CBE (21 October 1921[1] – 23 September 2006) was an English composer. His works feature music in many genres, including a cycle of nine symphonies, numerous concertos, concert works, chamber music, choral music and music for brass band and wind band. His style is tonal and rejoices in lively rhythms, brilliant orchestration, and an unabashed tunefulness.[2] He wrote extensively for the theatre, with five ballets specially commissioned by the Royal Ballet, as well as two operas and a musical. He also produced scores for more than a hundred films, among these The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957), for which he won an Oscar.

Sir Malcolm Arnold

Early life edit

Malcolm Arnold was born in Northampton, Northamptonshire, England,[1] the youngest of five children from a prosperous Northampton family of shoemakers. Although shoemakers, his family was full of musicians; both of his parents were pianists, and his aunt was a violinist. His great great grandfather was the composer William Hawes, a choirmaster at the Chapel Royal.[3] After seeing Louis Armstrong play in Bournemouth, he took up the trumpet at the age of 12,[1] and five years later won a scholarship to the Royal College of Music (R.C.M.).

At the RCM he studied composition with Gordon Jacob[4] and the trumpet with Ernest Hall. In 1941, he joined the London Philharmonic Orchestra[4] (LPO) as second trumpet and became principal trumpet in 1943.

In 1941 he registered as a conscientious objector, and was initially exempted from military service conditional upon joining the National Fire Service, but in the event he was allowed to continue in the LPO. In 1944, after his brother in the Royal Air Force had been killed, he volunteered for military service. When the army put him in a military band he shot himself in the foot to get back to civilian life; he remained in touch with the CO movement, giving a trumpet recital at the 1946 New Year party of the Central Board for Conscientious Objectors.[5] After a season as principal trumpet with the BBC Symphony Orchestra, he returned in 1946 to the London Philharmonic,[1] where he remained until 1948, leaving to become a full-time composer.[4]

Career edit

Arnold began his career playing trumpet professionally, but by the age of 30 his life was devoted to composition. He was ranked with Benjamin Britten as one of the most sought-after composers in Britain.[citation needed] His natural melodic gift earned him a reputation as a composer of light music in works such as some of his concert overtures and the sets of Welsh, English, Scottish, Irish and Cornish dances.[citation needed]

He was also a highly successful composer of film music, penning the scores to over a hundred features and documentaries, including titles such as The Bridge on the River Kwai, Hobson's Choice and the St Trinian's series.[1] His nine symphonies are often deeply personal and show a more serious side to his work, which has proved more controversial.[why?] Arnold also wrote a variety of concertos and chamber works, as well as music for the theatre including major ballets.[1]

Later years and death edit

By 1961, Arnold had a reputation for being unpleasant, frequently drunk and highly promiscuous. He divorced his first wife in that year. His second wife took out a court order after they separated. After their divorce, he made two suicide attempts.[1]

His later years saw a decline in both his health and his finances. In 1978, he was treated as an in-patient for several months in the acute psychiatric ward at the Royal Free Hospital, Pond Street, London, and in 1979 he entered St Andrew's Hospital in his hometown of Northampton to be treated for depression and alcoholism.

Between 1979 and 1986 he was formally in the care of the Court of Protection. However despite this, and being given only a year to live in the early 1980s, he recovered and lived for 22 more years, albeit with a carer, Anthony Day. In this period he completed his Ninth and final symphony in 1986.[1]

By the time of his 70th birthday in 1991 his artistic reputation with the general public was recovering and he was even able to enjoy a triumphant appearance on the stage of the Royal Albert Hall to receive an ovation after a Proms performance of his Guitar Concerto.[6][7]

Arnold died at the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital, Norwich, on 23 September 2006, aged 84, after suffering from a chest infection. That same day his last work, The Three Musketeers, was premiered in a Northern Ballet production at the Bradford Alhambra. (The score included no new music by Arnold, but excerpts from various of his compositions were arranged by John Longstaff. The original score was compiled by Anthony Meredith.)

A dispute was fought out between Day and members of Arnold's family over the royalties of Arnold's Ninth Symphony. Day was granted rights, having been left a substantial part of Arnold's estate.[8]

Music edit

Arnold was a relatively conservative composer of tonal works, but a prolific and popular one. He acknowledged Hector Berlioz as an influence, alongside Gustav Mahler, Béla Bartók and jazz.[9] Several commentators have drawn a comparison with Jean Sibelius. Arnold's most significant works are sometimes considered to be his nine symphonies. He also wrote a number of concertos, including one for guitar for Julian Bream, one for cello for Julian Lloyd Webber, two for clarinet for Frederick Thurston and Benny Goodman, one for harmonica for Larry Adler and one – enthusiastically welcomed at its premiere during the 1969 Proms – for three hands on two pianos for the husband-and-wife team of Cyril Smith and Phyllis Sellick. His sets of dances – comprising two sets of English Dances (Opp. 27 and 33), along with one set each of Scottish Dances (Op. 59), Cornish Dances (Op. 91), Irish Dances (Op. 126), and Welsh Dances (Op. 138) — are mainly in a lighter vein and are popular both in their original orchestral guise and in later wind and brass band arrangements. The English Dances also form the basis for Kenneth MacMillan's short ballet Solitaire, and one of them has been used as the theme music for the British television programme What the Papers Say (the Cornish Dances has provided the theme music for the television programmes of the cook Rick Stein). Arnold also wrote some highly successful concert overtures,[10] including Beckus the Dandipratt (an important stepping stone in his early career), the strikingly scored Tam o' Shanter (based on the famous Robert Burns poem), the rollicking A Grand Grand Overture (written for a Hoffnung Festival and featuring three vacuum cleaners and a floor polisher, all in turn polished off by a firing squad in a mock 1812 manner), and the dramatic Peterloo Overture (commissioned by the Trades Union Congress to commemorate the historic massacre of protesting workers in Manchester). Another popular short work is his Divertimento for Flute, Oboe and Clarinet (Op. 37). Arnold is also known for his relatively large number of compositions and arrangements of his own compositions for brass band. In 1954, Beckus the Dandipratt was given a radio studio performance by the BBC Symphony Orchestra under Leopold Stokowski, who was thanked by the composer for his "wonderful performance."

Film scores edit

A successful composer for the cinema, Malcolm Arnold was credited with having written over a hundred film scores for features and documentaries between 1947 and 1969.[11][12] In 1957, Arnold won an Academy Award for the music to David Lean's film The Bridge on the River Kwai. His two other collaborations with David Lean were The Sound Barrier (1952) and Hobson's Choice (1954). The Inn of the Sixth Happiness (1958) won Arnold an Ivor Novello Award. Also during the 1950s – an especially prolific period for Arnold – he provided a series of scores for major British and American feature films, such as The Captain's Paradise (1953), The Sea Shall Not Have Them (1954), The Night My Number Came Up (1955), The Constant Husband (1955), I Am a Camera (1955), 1984 (1956), Trapeze (1956), A Hill in Korea (1956), Dunkirk (1958), The Key (1958) and The Roots of Heaven (1958). He also wrote the music for the entire series of St Trinian's films, including The Belles of St Trinian's (1954), which was a particular favourite with the composer. The films' introductory theme has echoes of "Lili Marleen", the iconic wartime song. His 1960s scores included The Angry Silence (1960), Tunes of Glory (1960), No Love for Johnnie (1961), Whistle Down the Wind (1961), The Inspector (1962), The Lion (1962), Nine Hours to Rama (1963), Tamahine (1963), The Chalk Garden (1964), The Thin Red Line (1964), Sky West and Crooked (1965), The Heroes of Telemark (1965), Africa Texas Style (1967) and The Reckoning (1970). His last film score was for the movie David Copperfield (1969).

Legacy edit

He was the President of the Rochdale Youth Orchestra until his death in September 2006. The Leicestershire Schools Symphony Orchestra made the first commercial recording of Arnold's Divertimento for the Pye label in July 1967 and regularly performed many of his works in the UK and abroad.

Arnold also conducted the orchestra in a 1963 De Montfort Hall concert that included his own English Dances and Tam O'Shanter. Malcolm Arnold wrote the Trevelyan Suite to mark the opening of Trevelyan College, University of Durham. His daughter was among the first intake of students. He conducted the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in the live Royal Albert Hall recording of Jon Lord's Concerto for Group and Orchestra with Deep Purple in September, 1969.

The following year he conducted the premiere of Lord's Gemini Suite with Deep Purple and the Light Music Society at the Royal Festival Hall and in 1971 conducted the London Symphony Orchestra in the studio recording of Gemini Suite with various rock soloists.[13]

Since the 1980s there have been frequent concerts and festivals dedicated to his music. In October of each year there is a Malcolm Arnold Festival in his birthplace Northampton. On 3 September 2010 the Malcolm Arnold Academy, a secondary school in Northampton, was opened; while in September 2014 the new Malcolm Arnold Preparatory Free School was opened.[citation needed]

As of 2020, the fate of an archive of material relating to the period between 1979 and 1986, when Arnold was in the care of the Court of Protection, is in question. Because the archive contains personal information, its current holders, the Ministry of Justice, have always refused access to it and wish to destroy it. Arnold's daughter, Katherine Arnold, and others have appealed for it to be retained and transferred to the National Archives.[7] In a written answer to John Hayes MP on 17 November 2020, John Whittingdale, Minister of State at the Department for Culture, Media and Sport, stated that the fate of the records was under discussion between the Ministry of Justice, the National Archives and the Court of Protection, and that they were "not at imminent risk of destruction."[14]

Honours and awards edit

Bibliography edit

  • Burton-Page, Piers (1994). Philharmonic Concerto: The Life and Music of Sir Malcolm Arnold. London: Methuen. ISBN 978-0-413-45651-9.
  • Cole, Hugo (1989). Malcolm Arnold: An Introduction to His Music. London: Faber & Faber. ISBN 978-0571100712.
  • Craggs, Stewart R. (1998). Malcolm Arnold: A Bio-Bibliography. Bio Bibliographies in Music. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-29254-5.
  • Jackson, Paul R. (2003). The Life and Music of Sir Malcolm Arnold: The Brilliant and the Dark. UK: Ashgate. ISBN 978-1859283813.
  • Meredith, Anthony; Paul Harris (24 September 2004). Malcolm Arnold: Rogue Genius. UK: Thames / Elkin. ISBN 978-0-903413-54-1.
  • Poulton, Alan (29 January 2021). Malcolm Arnold – Catalogue of Works. UK: Malcolm Arnold Society. ISBN 979-8701911244.
  • Poulton, Alan (28 April 2021). Rooted in Northampton: The Arnolds and the Haweses: Malcolm Arnold's family tree. UK: Malcolm Arnold Society. ISBN 979-8745128936.
  • Schafer, (Raymond) Murray (1963). British Composers in Interview. UK: Faber & Faber.
  • Thöne, Raphael D. (20 August 2007). Malcolm Arnold – A Composer of Real Music: Symphonic Writing, Style and Aesthetics. Entercom Saurus. ISBN 978-3-937748-06-1.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Colin Larkin, ed. (1993). The Guinness Who's Who of Fifties Music (First ed.). Guinness Publishing. pp. 20/1. ISBN 0-85112-732-0.
  2. ^ Oxford illustrated encyclopedia. Judge, Harry George., Toyne, Anthony. Oxford [England]: Oxford University Press. 1985–1993. p. 22. ISBN 0-19-869129-7. OCLC 11814265.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  3. ^ Poulton, A. (2021). Rooted in Northampton: The Arnolds and the Haweses: Malcolm Arnold's family tree. Amazon. ISBN 979-8745128936.
  4. ^ a b c Grove Concise Dictionary of Music 1988 ISBN 0-333-43236-3
  5. ^ CBCO Bulletin, December 1945
  6. ^ Meredith and Harris, p 480.
  7. ^ a b Ulke, Alastair (10 November 2020). "Daughter of Northampton's most celebrated composer fights to stop destruction of archive". Northampton Chronicle & Echo. Retrieved 11 November 2020.
  8. ^ "Sir Malcolm Arnold's carer wins battle on final music score". BBC News. 8 March 2012. Retrieved 22 September 2014.
  9. ^ "Obituaries: Sir Malcolm Arnold". The Telegraph. 25 September 2006. Retrieved 22 September 2014.
  10. ^ Cooke, Mervyn (2005). Malcolm Arnold: Concert Overtures 7 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine (PDF). Chandos Records. Retrieved 2011-07-03.
  11. ^ Palmer, Christopher (1992). Malcolm Arnold: Film Music Suites – Premier Recordings 21 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine, sleeve notes (PDF). Chandos Records. Retrieved 2011-07-04.
  12. ^ Cox, James (2000). The Film Music of Sir Malcolm Arnold, Volume 2 21 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine, sleeve notes (PDF). Chandos Records. Retrieved 2011-07-04.
  13. ^ Vincent Budd, 2003, The Gemini Man: an Introduction to the Orchestral Works of Jon Lord, Gnosis Press.
  14. ^ "Sir Malcolm Arnold". Theyworkforyou.com. Retrieved 22 July 2021.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • The Malcolm Arnold Society
  • Official Malcolm Arnold Festival website
  • Malcolm Arnold at IMDb
  • Critical essay by Simon Heffer in Standpoint Magazine
  • Interview with Sir Malcolm Arnold, 16 March 1991

malcolm, arnold, british, athletics, coach, athletics, coach, malcolm, henry, arnold, october, 1921, september, 2006, english, composer, works, feature, music, many, genres, including, cycle, nine, symphonies, numerous, concertos, concert, works, chamber, musi. For the British athletics coach see Malcolm Arnold athletics coach Sir Malcolm Henry Arnold CBE 21 October 1921 1 23 September 2006 was an English composer His works feature music in many genres including a cycle of nine symphonies numerous concertos concert works chamber music choral music and music for brass band and wind band His style is tonal and rejoices in lively rhythms brilliant orchestration and an unabashed tunefulness 2 He wrote extensively for the theatre with five ballets specially commissioned by the Royal Ballet as well as two operas and a musical He also produced scores for more than a hundred films among these The Bridge on the River Kwai 1957 for which he won an Oscar Sir Malcolm Arnold Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Later years and death 4 Music 4 1 Film scores 5 Legacy 6 Honours and awards 7 Bibliography 8 References 9 External linksEarly life editMalcolm Arnold was born in Northampton Northamptonshire England 1 the youngest of five children from a prosperous Northampton family of shoemakers Although shoemakers his family was full of musicians both of his parents were pianists and his aunt was a violinist His great great grandfather was the composer William Hawes a choirmaster at the Chapel Royal 3 After seeing Louis Armstrong play in Bournemouth he took up the trumpet at the age of 12 1 and five years later won a scholarship to the Royal College of Music R C M At the RCM he studied composition with Gordon Jacob 4 and the trumpet with Ernest Hall In 1941 he joined the London Philharmonic Orchestra 4 LPO as second trumpet and became principal trumpet in 1943 In 1941 he registered as a conscientious objector and was initially exempted from military service conditional upon joining the National Fire Service but in the event he was allowed to continue in the LPO In 1944 after his brother in the Royal Air Force had been killed he volunteered for military service When the army put him in a military band he shot himself in the foot to get back to civilian life he remained in touch with the CO movement giving a trumpet recital at the 1946 New Year party of the Central Board for Conscientious Objectors 5 After a season as principal trumpet with the BBC Symphony Orchestra he returned in 1946 to the London Philharmonic 1 where he remained until 1948 leaving to become a full time composer 4 Career editArnold began his career playing trumpet professionally but by the age of 30 his life was devoted to composition He was ranked with Benjamin Britten as one of the most sought after composers in Britain citation needed His natural melodic gift earned him a reputation as a composer of light music in works such as some of his concert overtures and the sets of Welsh English Scottish Irish and Cornish dances citation needed He was also a highly successful composer of film music penning the scores to over a hundred features and documentaries including titles such as The Bridge on the River Kwai Hobson s Choice and the St Trinian s series 1 His nine symphonies are often deeply personal and show a more serious side to his work which has proved more controversial why Arnold also wrote a variety of concertos and chamber works as well as music for the theatre including major ballets 1 Later years and death editBy 1961 Arnold had a reputation for being unpleasant frequently drunk and highly promiscuous He divorced his first wife in that year His second wife took out a court order after they separated After their divorce he made two suicide attempts 1 His later years saw a decline in both his health and his finances In 1978 he was treated as an in patient for several months in the acute psychiatric ward at the Royal Free Hospital Pond Street London and in 1979 he entered St Andrew s Hospital in his hometown of Northampton to be treated for depression and alcoholism Between 1979 and 1986 he was formally in the care of the Court of Protection However despite this and being given only a year to live in the early 1980s he recovered and lived for 22 more years albeit with a carer Anthony Day In this period he completed his Ninth and final symphony in 1986 1 By the time of his 70th birthday in 1991 his artistic reputation with the general public was recovering and he was even able to enjoy a triumphant appearance on the stage of the Royal Albert Hall to receive an ovation after a Proms performance of his Guitar Concerto 6 7 Arnold died at the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital Norwich on 23 September 2006 aged 84 after suffering from a chest infection That same day his last work The Three Musketeers was premiered in a Northern Ballet production at the Bradford Alhambra The score included no new music by Arnold but excerpts from various of his compositions were arranged by John Longstaff The original score was compiled by Anthony Meredith A dispute was fought out between Day and members of Arnold s family over the royalties of Arnold s Ninth Symphony Day was granted rights having been left a substantial part of Arnold s estate 8 Music editFor a listing of Arnold s musical works see List of compositions by Malcolm Arnold and Category Compositions by Malcolm Arnold Arnold was a relatively conservative composer of tonal works but a prolific and popular one He acknowledged Hector Berlioz as an influence alongside Gustav Mahler Bela Bartok and jazz 9 Several commentators have drawn a comparison with Jean Sibelius Arnold s most significant works are sometimes considered to be his nine symphonies He also wrote a number of concertos including one for guitar for Julian Bream one for cello for Julian Lloyd Webber two for clarinet for Frederick Thurston and Benny Goodman one for harmonica for Larry Adler and one enthusiastically welcomed at its premiere during the 1969 Proms for three hands on two pianos for the husband and wife team of Cyril Smith and Phyllis Sellick His sets of dances comprising two sets of English Dances Opp 27 and 33 along with one set each of Scottish Dances Op 59 Cornish Dances Op 91 Irish Dances Op 126 and Welsh Dances Op 138 are mainly in a lighter vein and are popular both in their original orchestral guise and in later wind and brass band arrangements The English Dances also form the basis for Kenneth MacMillan s short ballet Solitaire and one of them has been used as the theme music for the British television programme What the Papers Say the Cornish Dances has provided the theme music for the television programmes of the cook Rick Stein Arnold also wrote some highly successful concert overtures 10 including Beckus the Dandipratt an important stepping stone in his early career the strikingly scored Tam o Shanter based on the famous Robert Burns poem the rollicking A Grand Grand Overture written for a Hoffnung Festival and featuring three vacuum cleaners and a floor polisher all in turn polished off by a firing squad in a mock 1812 manner and the dramatic Peterloo Overture commissioned by the Trades Union Congress to commemorate the historic massacre of protesting workers in Manchester Another popular short work is his Divertimento for Flute Oboe and Clarinet Op 37 Arnold is also known for his relatively large number of compositions and arrangements of his own compositions for brass band In 1954 Beckus the Dandipratt was given a radio studio performance by the BBC Symphony Orchestra under Leopold Stokowski who was thanked by the composer for his wonderful performance Film scores edit A successful composer for the cinema Malcolm Arnold was credited with having written over a hundred film scores for features and documentaries between 1947 and 1969 11 12 In 1957 Arnold won an Academy Award for the music to David Lean s film The Bridge on the River Kwai His two other collaborations with David Lean were The Sound Barrier 1952 and Hobson s Choice 1954 The Inn of the Sixth Happiness 1958 won Arnold an Ivor Novello Award Also during the 1950s an especially prolific period for Arnold he provided a series of scores for major British and American feature films such as The Captain s Paradise 1953 The Sea Shall Not Have Them 1954 The Night My Number Came Up 1955 The Constant Husband 1955 I Am a Camera 1955 1984 1956 Trapeze 1956 A Hill in Korea 1956 Dunkirk 1958 The Key 1958 and The Roots of Heaven 1958 He also wrote the music for the entire series of St Trinian s films including The Belles of St Trinian s 1954 which was a particular favourite with the composer The films introductory theme has echoes of Lili Marleen the iconic wartime song His 1960s scores included The Angry Silence 1960 Tunes of Glory 1960 No Love for Johnnie 1961 Whistle Down the Wind 1961 The Inspector 1962 The Lion 1962 Nine Hours to Rama 1963 Tamahine 1963 The Chalk Garden 1964 The Thin Red Line 1964 Sky West and Crooked 1965 The Heroes of Telemark 1965 Africa Texas Style 1967 and The Reckoning 1970 His last film score was for the movie David Copperfield 1969 Legacy editHe was the President of the Rochdale Youth Orchestra until his death in September 2006 The Leicestershire Schools Symphony Orchestra made the first commercial recording of Arnold s Divertimento for the Pye label in July 1967 and regularly performed many of his works in the UK and abroad Arnold also conducted the orchestra in a 1963 De Montfort Hall concert that included his own English Dances and Tam O Shanter Malcolm Arnold wrote the Trevelyan Suite to mark the opening of Trevelyan College University of Durham His daughter was among the first intake of students He conducted the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in the live Royal Albert Hall recording of Jon Lord s Concerto for Group and Orchestra with Deep Purple in September 1969 The following year he conducted the premiere of Lord s Gemini Suite with Deep Purple and the Light Music Society at the Royal Festival Hall and in 1971 conducted the London Symphony Orchestra in the studio recording of Gemini Suite with various rock soloists 13 Since the 1980s there have been frequent concerts and festivals dedicated to his music In October of each year there is a Malcolm Arnold Festival in his birthplace Northampton On 3 September 2010 the Malcolm Arnold Academy a secondary school in Northampton was opened while in September 2014 the new Malcolm Arnold Preparatory Free School was opened citation needed As of 2020 update the fate of an archive of material relating to the period between 1979 and 1986 when Arnold was in the care of the Court of Protection is in question Because the archive contains personal information its current holders the Ministry of Justice have always refused access to it and wish to destroy it Arnold s daughter Katherine Arnold and others have appealed for it to be retained and transferred to the National Archives 7 In a written answer to John Hayes MP on 17 November 2020 John Whittingdale Minister of State at the Department for Culture Media and Sport stated that the fate of the records was under discussion between the Ministry of Justice the National Archives and the Court of Protection and that they were not at imminent risk of destruction 14 Honours and awards edit1937 won a scholarship to the Royal College of Music 1941 Cobbett Competition 2nd prize for Vita Abundans 1948 awarded scholarship by the Royal Academy of Music s Mendelssohn Scholarship Foundation 1951 Venice Film Festival 1st prize in the music documentary class for Science in the Orchestra 1958 won Academy Award for the music to The Bridge on the River Kwai 1959 Ivor Novello Award for the music to The Inn of the Sixth Happiness 1969 Honorary Doctorate University of Exeter 1969 created a Bard of Gorseth Kernow taking the Bardic name Trompour Trumpeter 1970 appointed a Commander CBE of the Order of the British Empire 1982 Honorary Doctorate University of Durham 1983 Fellowship of the Royal College of Music London 1984 Honorary Doctorate University of Leicester 1985 Honorary Member Royal Academy of Music London 1986 Ivor Novello Award for Outstanding Services to British Music 1987 Wavendon AllMusic Composer of the Year 1989 Honorary Doctorate Miami University of Ohio 1989 Freedom of the Borough of Northampton 1992 Fellowship of the Trinity College of Music London 1993 knighted for services to music 1994 Honorary President Victoria College of Music London 1997 Fellowship of the Royal Northern College of Music Manchester 2001 Fellowship of the British Academy of Songwriters Composers and Authors 2003 Honorary Doctorate University of Winchester 2004 Distinguished Musician Award Incorporated Society of Musicians 2006 Honorary Doctorate University of NorthamptonBibliography editBurton Page Piers 1994 Philharmonic Concerto The Life and Music of Sir Malcolm Arnold London Methuen ISBN 978 0 413 45651 9 Cole Hugo 1989 Malcolm Arnold An Introduction to His Music London Faber amp Faber ISBN 978 0571100712 Craggs Stewart R 1998 Malcolm Arnold A Bio Bibliography Bio Bibliographies in Music Westport CT Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 29254 5 Jackson Paul R 2003 The Life and Music of Sir Malcolm Arnold The Brilliant and the Dark UK Ashgate ISBN 978 1859283813 Meredith Anthony Paul Harris 24 September 2004 Malcolm Arnold Rogue Genius UK Thames Elkin ISBN 978 0 903413 54 1 Poulton Alan 29 January 2021 Malcolm Arnold Catalogue of Works UK Malcolm Arnold Society ISBN 979 8701911244 Poulton Alan 28 April 2021 Rooted in Northampton The Arnolds and the Haweses Malcolm Arnold s family tree UK Malcolm Arnold Society ISBN 979 8745128936 Schafer Raymond Murray 1963 British Composers in Interview UK Faber amp Faber Thone Raphael D 20 August 2007 Malcolm Arnold A Composer of Real Music Symphonic Writing Style and Aesthetics Entercom Saurus ISBN 978 3 937748 06 1 References edit a b c d e f g h Colin Larkin ed 1993 The Guinness Who s Who of Fifties Music First ed Guinness Publishing pp 20 1 ISBN 0 85112 732 0 Oxford illustrated encyclopedia Judge Harry George Toyne Anthony Oxford England Oxford University Press 1985 1993 p 22 ISBN 0 19 869129 7 OCLC 11814265 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Poulton A 2021 Rooted in Northampton The Arnolds and the Haweses Malcolm Arnold s family tree Amazon ISBN 979 8745128936 a b c Grove Concise Dictionary of Music 1988 ISBN 0 333 43236 3 CBCO Bulletin December 1945 Meredith and Harris p 480 a b Ulke Alastair 10 November 2020 Daughter of Northampton s most celebrated composer fights to stop destruction of archive Northampton Chronicle amp Echo Retrieved 11 November 2020 Sir Malcolm Arnold s carer wins battle on final music score BBC News 8 March 2012 Retrieved 22 September 2014 Obituaries Sir Malcolm Arnold The Telegraph 25 September 2006 Retrieved 22 September 2014 Cooke Mervyn 2005 Malcolm Arnold Concert Overtures Archived 7 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine PDF Chandos Records Retrieved 2011 07 03 Palmer Christopher 1992 Malcolm Arnold Film Music Suites Premier Recordings Archived 21 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine sleeve notes PDF Chandos Records Retrieved 2011 07 04 Cox James 2000 The Film Music of Sir Malcolm Arnold Volume 2 Archived 21 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine sleeve notes PDF Chandos Records Retrieved 2011 07 04 Vincent Budd 2003 The Gemini Man an Introduction to the Orchestral Works of Jon Lord Gnosis Press Sir Malcolm Arnold Theyworkforyou com Retrieved 22 July 2021 External links edit nbsp England portal nbsp Cornwall portalOfficial website The Malcolm Arnold Society Official Malcolm Arnold Festival website Malcolm Arnold at IMDb Critical essay by Simon Heffer in Standpoint Magazine Interview with Sir Malcolm Arnold 16 March 1991 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Malcolm Arnold amp oldid 1190782222, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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