BBC Theatre Organ

Last updated

The BBC Theatre Organ has existed in various guises and locations since 1933, used for in-house, often live broadcasts of organ music from the British Broadcasting Corporation. In theatre organ circles there are just three "official" BBC Theatre Organs: the St George's Hall Compton, Foort's Travelling Moller replacement, and the Manchester Wurlitzer.

Contents

BBC Radio Theatre

The first organ broadcasts in Britain were given by 2LO in the 1920s with recitals from London's Steinway Hall in Marylebone Lane. The earliest BBC organ programmes were relayed from the Shepherd's Bush Pavilion and the New Gallery Kinema at 121 Regent Street. The popularity of these programmes and the need for access during late hour live broadcasts led the BBC to install its own instruments. The BBC's first in-house organ - a Compton organ - was unveiled at the BBC Radio Theatre (then named The Concert Hall) within Broadcasting House on 16 June 1933. [1] To celebrate the event, the corporation broadcast a concert with George Thalben-Ball, G. D. Cunningham, and Walter Alcock. The organ featured 2,826 pipes in 35 ranks. [2] However it wasn't used extensively due to the problem of sound leakage to other broadcasting studios, which were in constant use.

St George's Hall

In 1933 the BBC acquired St. George's Hall, a theatre in Langham Place opposite Broadcasting House, for broadcasts of vaudeville, comedy and revue shows. In 1936 the first large scale theatre organ in the country to be specially designed and built exclusively for broadcasting - typically regarded as the original BBC Theatre Organ - was installed. It was another Compton - specifically a four manual Compton Melotone and Electrostatic Organ with 23 units, capable of producing a wider range of sounds during performances. [3] In 1936 Reginald Foort was appointed resident organist, and the organ was first used in a broadcast on 20 October 1936, played by Foort and three other well-known organists of the day: Quentin Maclean, Reginald Porter-Brown and Harold Ramsay. [4]

From 1936 the BBC Theatre Organ was used for frequent broadcasts by many organists, including Fredric Bayco, Dudley Beaven (who used it for the first episode of Music While You Work in June 1940), [5] Harold Robinson Cleaver, Frederic Curzon, Florence De Jong, Reginald Dixon, Reginald New, George Pattman, Dudley Savage, Donald Thorne, and Sidney Torch. As staff organist Foort performed in the vast majority of broadcasts, followed by, though overlapping with, his eventual successor Sandy MacPherson from July 1937. In the first two years Foort gave over 400 solo broadcasts and introduced 72 guest organists to the BBC Theatre Organ. [6] When the BBC briefly switched to broadcasting only light music at the outbreak of war in September 1939, MacPherson played up to twelve hours per day whilst the organisation hastily evacuated its staff from London to various locations around the British Isles. [7]

Foort's Travelling Moller

St George's Hall and the organ sustained extensive bomb damage from air raids in September 1940, May 1941 and March 1943, and the BBC studios were moved to the Aeolian Hall in New Bond Street. To replace the organ, Foort offered to loan the BBC his "Travelling Moller", a large scale organ designed to be moved for performances in different venues. It had been built by the Danish-American organ maker M. P. Moller to Foort's specifications. [8] The instrument was initially installed in Bangor, Wales, close to Macpherson's house in Llandudno. [9] In 1946 the BBC purchased the organ from Foort outright and installed it in the disused Jubilee Chapel, East Road in Hoxton (now demolished), where it remained for the next 18 years, until 1963. It was regularly used for 10am morning broadcasts, mostly by Sandy MacPherson. The organ was then sold to Netherlands Radio VARA for use at its studios in Hilversum. [8]

Maida Vale and Manchester

A three manual electronic organ was also commissioned in 1936 for the BBC's Maida Vale Studios, [10] [11] where it has remained in use until the present day. It was used there for BBC Symphony Orchestra rehearsals where an organ was required. But in the late 1960s the BBC acquired its third "official" BBC Theatre Organ: a Wurlitzer from the Empress Ballroom Blackpool, enabling Reginald Dixon to continue broadcasting after his retirement from the Tower Ballroom in 1969. [12] It was installed at the BBC Playhouse studios in Manchester until the studios closed in 1986. [13] The organ was introduced on 12 November 1970 as a gala performance edition of The Organist Entertains by Robin Richmond, with performances by Ernest Broadbent, Reginald Dixon and Reginald Porter Brown. [14]

Latter day broadcasts in the 1970s and 1980s by Reginald Dixon, Nigel Ogden, Robin Richmond, Dudley Savage and others were broadcast from Manchester. The final time an organist was billed as playing "at the console of The BBC Theatre Organ" on air was on 14 July 1990. The organist was Harold Robinson Cleaver, in a programme recorded before his death three years earlier. [15]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Theatre organ</span> Type of pipe organ

A theatre organ is a type of pipe organ developed to accompany silent films, from the 1900s to the 1920s.

Reginald Herbert Dixon, MBE, ARCM was an English theatre organist who was primarily known for his position as organist at the Tower Ballroom, Blackpool, a position he held from March 1930 until March 1970. He made and sold more recordings than any other organist before him, or since. He was in high demand throughout the 1930s, 40s, 50s, 60s and 70s. During his fifty-year career he was one of the top-selling artists, his prolific output ranking alongside that of Victor Silvester and Bing Crosby.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">BBC Forces Programme</span> Former British national radio station during World War II (1940–1944)

The BBC Forces Programme was a national radio station which operated from 7 January 1940 until 26 February 1944.

Horace Finch was an English pianist and organist.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sidney Torch</span> Musical artist

Sidney Torch MBE was a British pianist, cinema organist, conductor, orchestral arranger and a composer of light music.

Roderick Hallowell "Sandy" MacPherson was a Canadian-born theatre organist in Britain. As the second official BBC Theatre Organist, in succession to Reginald Foort, he achieved considerable broadcasting time during and after World War II.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jesse Crawford</span> Musical artist

Jesse Crawford was an American pianist and organist. He was well known in the 1920s as a theatre organist for silent films and as a popular recording artist. In the 1930s, he switched to the Hammond organ and became a freelancer. In the 1940s, he authored instruction books on organ and taught organ lessons.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">St. George's Hall, London</span> Former theatre in Langham Place, London

St. George's Hall was a theatre located in Langham Place, off Regent Street in the West End of London. It was built in 1867 and closed in 1966. The hall could accommodate between 800 and 900 persons, or up to 1,500 persons including the galleries. The architect was John Taylor of Whitehall.

Arnold Loxam was a professional concert organist. He was a native of Bradford, Yorkshire and gave his first broadcast there as a child pianist in 1925. Loxam made his first appearance on the keyboard of the Wurlitzer theatre organ at the then New Victoria cinema in Bradford. Arnold Loxam first visited the New Victoria Cinema, Bradford, which later became the Odeon, when he was a 14-year-old member of the audience on the opening night of the theatre on 22 September 1930.

William Dudley Savage MBE was a British organist and broadcaster who for many years broadcast a hospital request programme from the Royal (ABC) cinema in Plymouth. He both introduced and played requests on the Royal organ. When it was axed, the resultant petition was said at the time to be the largest the BBC had ever encountered.

Philip Julian Kelsall MBE ALCM is an English theatre organist who has been principal organist at the Blackpool Tower Ballroom since 1977. Born in Warrington, Lancashire, he was inspired to learn the instrument by Reginald Dixon, and was initially appointed as organist for the Tower Circus band aged 18 in 1975; he also deputised for Ernest Broadbent in the Ballroom itself. This followed his attending Rossall School in Fleetwood, an independent day and boarding school where he was taught by Robin Proctor, who subsequently became Director of Music at Cheltenham College. After Ernest Broadbent's retirement, he was appointed Tower organist in 1977.

The Organist Entertains was a long-running music programme broadcast on BBC Radio 2. The 30 minute programme focused on the organ in its many guises, and played recordings and live broadcasts of theatre organs, pipe organs and electronic organs around the United Kingdom and the rest of the world.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Wurlitzer theatre organs in the United Kingdom</span> UK theatre organs

A number of Wurlitzer theatre organs were imported and installed in the United Kingdom in the period from 1925 to just before the Second World War (1939–45).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Reginald New</span> UK theatre organist (1902–1958)

Reginald New was a popular UK theatre organist whose career spanned the 1920s through to the 1950s.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Reginald Foort</span> UK theatre organist (1894–1980)

Reginald John Foort, FRCO, ARCM, was a cinema organist and theatre organist. He was the first official BBC Staff Theatre Organist from 1936 to 1938, during which time he made 405 broadcasts on the organ at St George's Hall, Langham Place. 'Reggie' was a hugely popular broadcaster in his heyday in the late 1930s and 1940s in Britain and later settled in the United States, where he similarly enjoyed an illustrious career performing and recording.

Len Rawle, MBE, was a Welsh organ builder and organist. A London College of Music graduate, he was particularly noted for his restoration of Wurlitzer theatre organs. In 1973 he appeared in the TV documentary film Metro-Land, written and narrated by Sir John Betjeman, and performed Chattanooga Choo Choo and The Varsity Drag, a song which would have been popular when Betjeman was a young man. Rawle gave numerous concerts and workshops in the US, Australia and Europe. In May 2001 he played on "Western New York's mightiest Wurlitzer theater pipe organ" in Buffalo.

Nigel Ogden is an English theatre organist, known for presenting and performing on the BBC Radio 2 programme The Organist Entertains between 1980 and the end of the show's run in 2018.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">BBC Radio Theatre</span> Theatre at BBC Broadcasting House in London

The BBC Radio Theatre is a theatre situated within the BBC's Broadcasting House complex. It is used for live broadcast and audio recordings.

This is a list of events from British radio in 1933.

References

  1. 'The New Organ Speaks', in Radio Times, Issue 506, 11 June 1933, p. 11
  2. Beckwith, Roger. "Broadcasting House in the 1930s". www.orbem.co.uk. Old BBC Radio Broadcasting Equipment and Memories. Retrieved 11 November 2019.
  3. Reginald Foort. 'The BBC Theatre Organ', text from pre-war BBC brochure, reproduced post-war (no date) in Theatre Organ magazine
  4. 'Opening broadcast of the new BBC Theatre Organ', Radio Times, Issue 681, 18th Oct 1936, pp. 8 and 42
  5. Christina L. Baade. 'Music While You Work: Discipline, Dance Music, and Workers in Wartime', Ch. 3 of Victory through Harmony: The BBC and Popular Music in World War II (2011)
  6. Radio Times, Issue 787, 30th Oct 1938, p. 28
  7. Dibbs, Martin. Radio Fun and the BBC Variety Department, 1922-67 (2018), pp. 109-10
  8. 1 2 'Reginald Foort's Traveling Moller', theatreorgans.com
  9. McPherson, Sandy. Sandy Presents (1950)
  10. 'New Organ for BBC', in The Times, 29 February 1936, p.10
  11. 'BBC buys a new organ', in Cairns Post, 5 January 1950, p. 4
  12. "Reginald Dixon to Retire". The Glasgow Herald. 11 June 1969. Retrieved 30 April 2012.
  13. Tony Nuttall. The Playhouse Theatre, Manchester
  14. 'Gala Performance of The Organist Entertains', BBC Radio 2, 12 November 1970
  15. Radio Times, Issue 3474, 14th July 1990