Jack Beaver
Jack Beaver (27 March 1900 – 10 September 1963) was a British film score composer and pianist. Beaver was born in Clapham, London. He studied at the Metropolitan Academy of Music, Forest Gate and then at the Royal Academy of Music under Frederick Corder. After graduating he worked for the BBC. In the early 1930s he played with the Michael Doré Trio and wrote some concert pieces, including the three movement Sonatina for piano. He also contributed music and arrangements for various BBC radio drama and music features, including most of the radio adaptions of films produced by Douglas Moodie, throughout the 1930s and 1940s.
As (like Charles Williams) a member of the Gaumont–British Pictures composing team from the 1930s he was a prolific composer of film scores - around 40 scores between 1932 and 1947 - though many of his contributions were not credited. These included scores for the Secrets of Life series of documentaries produced between 1934 and 1947. He wrote music for Alfred Hitchcock's The 39 Steps (1935), and composed the pseudo piano concerto Portrait of Isla from the score for the 1940 Edgar Wallace film The Case of the Frightened Lady. This is perhaps the first example of a Romantic style "Denham Concerto" (or sometimes "tabloid piano concerto") composed especially for a film, a year before Richard Addinsell's much more famous Warsaw Concerto appeared in the film Dangerous Moonlight (1941).
Later in life Beaver was a regular contributor to the recorded music libraries, a regular resource of continuity music for BBC radio - such as News Theatre, recorded for the Chappell Music Library on 10 inch 78 RPM records in 1948. His march Cavalcade of Youth (1950) became widely known when it was used as signature tune for the BBC radio series The Barlowes of Beddington. Another example of his library music is Holiday Funfair (1954), performed by Dolf van der Linden And His Orchestra. He composed Sovereign Heritage for the National Brass Band Championships of 1954.
During the 1930s Beaver was living at 141 Gleneldon Road in Streatham. By the 1950s his address was 40 Fairfax Road, Teddington in Middlesex. He died aged 63 in Battersea, London. His son, Raymond Elgar Beaver, (19 August 1929 – 25 January 2008), was also a composer of film music.
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Marching Strings - British Light Music Classics, Vol. 4 -
Jack Beaver
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Ring of Kerry: I. Jaunting Car - British Light Music Classics, Vol. 4 -
Jack Beaver
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High Heels - British Light Music Classics, Vol. 4 -
Jack Beaver
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Dance of an Ostracized Imp - British Light Music Classics, Vol. 4 -
Jack Beaver
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A Keltic Suite, Op. 29: II. Keltic Lament - British Light Music Classics, Vol. 4 -
Jack Beaver
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Rhythm on Rails - British Light Music Classics, Vol. 4 -
Jack Beaver
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By the Sleepy Lagoon - British Light Music Classics, Vol. 4 -
Jack Beaver
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Jamaican Rumba - British Light Music Classics, Vol. 4 -
Jack Beaver
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In a Monastery Garden - British Light Music Classics, Vol. 4 -
Jack Beaver
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A Quiet Stroll - British Light Music Classics, Vol. 4 -
Jack Beaver
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2 Parisian Sketches: I. Demoiselle chic - British Light Music Classics, Vol. 4 -
Jack Beaver
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Cavalcade of Youth - British Light Music Classics, Vol. 4 -
Jack Beaver
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Elizabethan Masque - British Light Music Classics, Vol. 4 -
Jack Beaver
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Shepherd Fennel's Dance - British Light Music Classics, Vol. 4 -
Jack Beaver
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Thrills - British Light Music Classics, Vol. 4 -
Jack Beaver
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The Merchant of Venice: The Doge's March - British Light Music Classics, Vol. 4 -
Jack Beaver
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Petite suite de concert, Op. 77: I. La caprice de Nanette - British Light Music Classics, Vol. 4 -
Jack Beaver
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Petite suite de concert, Op. 77: II. Demande et réponse - British Light Music Classics, Vol. 4 -
Jack Beaver
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Petite suite de concert, Op. 77: III. Un sonnet d'amour - British Light Music Classics, Vol. 4 -
Jack Beaver
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Petite suite de concert, Op. 77: IV. La tarantelle frétillante - British Light Music Classics, Vol. 4 -
Jack Beaver
Light Assembly
- 1962-01-01T00:00:00.000000Z
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