Brian Fahey
Easy listening, Composer
1919 – 2007
Who was Brian Fahey?
Brian Fahey was a British musical director and arranger, best known for composing At the Sign of the Swingin' Cymbal, Alan Freeman's signature tune.
Born in Margate, Kent, Fahey learned piano and cello and became interested in big band arranging and composing. During the Second World War he was a survivor of the Wormhoudt massacre which occurred on Tuesday 28 May 1940. After recovering from his wounds, he subsequently spent five years in POW Camps, during which time he worked on his musical skills.
Fahey played in various bands, but his passion was for arranging. Between 1949 and 1959, he worked for the music publishers Chappells and Cinephonic Music, specialising in arrangements for singers, bands and orchestras, mainly for radio broadcasts. His compositions include Fanfare Boogie, which won an Ivor Novello Award.
Fahey freelanced after 1959, working with recording companies, the BBC and in the theatre. He provided scores for movies - The Break, Curse of Simba, The Plank and Rhubarb. He became principal conductor of the BBC Scottish Radio Orchestra in 1972, and continued to work for the BBC after the orchestra was disbanded in 1981. He was also Shirley Bassey's musical director for a time.
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- Born
- Apr 25, 1919
Margate - Spouses
- Audrey Watkins
(1947 - 2006/11)
- Audrey Watkins
- Nationality
- England
- Profession
- Lived in
- Margate
- Died
- Apr 4, 2007
Worthing
Submitted
on July 23, 2013
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