Benjamin Frankel(1906-1973)
- Composer
- Music Department
- Soundtrack
Composer, conductor, arranger and music director. Trained Cologne,
Berlin and London (at the Guildhall school of Music and Drama). From
the age of seventeen, earned a living as a jazz fiddler, pianist and
arranger in, among others, Carroll Gibbons' Savoy Orpheans and Henry
Hall's BBC Dance Orchestra. Entered films in 1934, ultimately working
on over a hundred scores for cinema, theatre and television. Also
worked as music director on shows of C.B.Cochrane and Noel Coward in
London's West end. His works for the concert hall gained recognition
toward the end of the War, with a string of fine chamber works and, in
1951, the Violin Concerto "In memory of the Six Million" who had
perished in the Holocaust. His reputation as a serious composer was
later affirmed by a series of eight symphonies and an opera, "Marching
Song", from the play by John Whiting, all composed between 1958 and his
death in 1973. His concert music during this period combined a
late-romantic quality with the twelve-tone (serial) principles laid
down by Arnold Schoenberg and his score for the 1960 film "Curse of the
Werewolf" is believed to be the first in Britain have been based on
upon them. Reputedly, he was the highest paid British composer of film
music, during the 1950s.