The Master Singers | |
---|---|
Origin | Abingdon School, England |
Genres | Anglican chant, novelty records |
Years active | 1963–67 |
Labels | Parlophone Records |
Past members | John Horrex George Pratt Geoff Keating Barry Montague Mike Warrington |
The Master Singers were a British vocal group in the 1960s. Comprising four schoolmasters, they specialised in comedic recordings of mundane documents and announcements such as the radio weather forecast and the Highway Code , performed a cappella as Anglican chant. Two of their records, "Highway Code" and "Weather Forecast", both produced by George Martin, reached the UK singles chart in 1966.
The original setting of the Highway Code in Anglican chant was devised by John Horrex, a teacher at Abingdon School, in the late 1950s. He performed it with various friends at local church and school social events for several years. In 1963, to celebrate the school's tercentenary, Horrex with three other teachers – George Pratt, Geoff Keating and Barry Montague – made a private recording of the Highway Code in several different styles. A copy of the recording reached broadcaster and humourist Fritz Spiegl, who in turn passed it to the BBC where it was played on a radio show hosted by Winston Churchill, the grandson of the former prime minister. [1]
The group were then contracted to record for Parlophone Records. They first appeared on record in late 1965 with Peter Sellers on his version of the Beatles' "Help!", which was released as the B-side of his version of "A Hard Day's Night", produced by George Martin. [2] The group also recorded Christmas carols with Cliff Richard; although the recordings were not used, they were heard by another popular vocal group, The King's Singers, who then asked Pratt to arrange carols on their own recordings. [1]
The Master Singers' version of "Highway Code", arranged by Horrex and Keating and produced by George Martin, was released in April 1966, and rose to no.25 on the UK singles chart. [3] They followed it up with "Telephone Directory", and then "Weather Forecast", which reached no. 50, [3] although they encountered copyright difficulties with "Telephone Directory" as the General Post Office claimed copyright on the names and telephone numbers and prohibited the group from using the directory's contents. [4] They also recorded two songs for a Keele University charity record, The Master Singers And Shirley Kent Sing For Charec 67, [5] and released an EP comprising two of their singles. [6]
The "Highway Code" makes use of four Anglican chants, composed by W. H. Havergal, E. J. Hopkins, William Felton and J. T. Harris. [7] [8]
The group also made several television appearances. Montague left the group to move to Australia, and was replaced by Mike Warrington from Cheadle Hulme School. As the original members each left Abingdon School, and their teaching careers took them to different parts of the country – Horrex to Glasgow, Pratt to Keele, and Keating to Cheadle Hulme – the group split up. [1]
John Horrex joined the staff at The Glasgow Academy as Head of the Physics Department in January 1965, where he was also much involved in many Academy stage productions – as writer, producer, actor and technical adviser. Some 16 years later he moved to become Head of Physics at St Edmund’s School, Canterbury. He died on 18 March 2013. [9]
Geoff Keating became Director of Music at Millfield School, where he stayed for 17 years, and also taught at Sherborne School for three years before retiring to Scotland. He was conductor of the Solway Sinfonia from 1997 until 2018. [10]
Barry Montague joined the staff of Brisbane Grammar School to teach English. He established The Grammar Singers a combined choir with the Girls' Grammar School and initiated a Service of Lessons and Carols at St John's Cathedral as well as performances of major works such as Bach St John Passion, Faure Requiem, Haydn Nelson Mass and Elgar's The Music Makers. The renowned organist Christopher Wrench accompanied the choir for many years. He retired in 2001 and lives near Brisbane in the Bayside suburb of Newport.
George Pratt (1935-2017) became Director of Music at Keele University from 1964 to 1985, where he installed an innovative organ in the new University Chapel in 1965. [11] He was instrumental in the founding of the influential Lindsay String Quartet and secured a Leverhulme Scholarship for them to begin their careers as artists in residence at Keele. He was later Professor of Music at Huddersfield University [12] and the author of The Dynamics of Harmony (Open University 1984). He retired to Exeter, where he died in 2017. [13]
Mike Warrington became a head teacher in Oldham before retiring. [1]
The Fourmost are an English Merseybeat band that recorded in the 1960s. Their biggest UK hit single was "A Little Loving" in 1964.
Stephen Anthony James Duffy is an English musician, singer, and songwriter. He was a founding member, vocalist, bassist, and then drummer of Duran Duran. He went on to record as a solo performer under several different names, and is the singer and songwriter for The Lilac Time with his older brother Nick. He has also co-written with Robbie Williams and Steven Page.
Jona Lewie is an English singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist, best known for his 1980 UK hits "You'll Always Find Me in the Kitchen at Parties" and "Stop the Cavalry".
Reparata and the Delrons were an American girl group. They are best known for their 1965 recordings "Whenever a Teenager Cries" and "Tommy", for the 1968 European hit "Captain of Your Ship" and for Reparata's 1975 solo hit "Shoes".
"When You Say Nothing at All" is a country song written by Paul Overstreet and Don Schlitz. It was a hit song for four different performers: Keith Whitley, who took it to the top of the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart on December 24, 1988; Alison Krauss & Union Station, whose version was their first solo top-10 country hit in 1995; Irish singer Frances Black, whose 1996 version became her third Irish top-10 single and brought the song to the attention of Irish pop singer Ronan Keating, whose 1999 version was his first solo single and a number-one hit in the United Kingdom, Ireland, and New Zealand.
Andy Pratt is an American rock singer, songwriter and multi-instrumentalist. In the 1970s, he made a number of experimental records, of which "Avenging Annie" was a commercial hit.
Gwendolyn Dianne Brooks, was a soul, r&b and jazz singer from New Jersey. With the Three Playmates, Brooks recorded several songs in 1957. She moved to Toronto shortly thereafter. Her part in Canadian soul music history began when the group Diane Brooks, Eric Mercury and the Soul Searchers was formed. As a solo singer, she recorded two albums and several singles of her own. Her biggest solo hit was "Walkin' on My Mind" in 1969. She was also a prolific session singer. As a vocalist, she provided backing vocals on albums by a multitude of artists that include Anne Murray, Gino Vannelli and Richie Havens. She was also a song-writer.
"If Tomorrow Never Comes" is a song by American country music artist Garth Brooks. Written by Brooks and Kent Blazy, it was released in August 1989 as the second single from his self-titled debut album. The track was his first number-one single on the US Billboard Hot Country Singles chart, and Brooks refers to it as his signature song. "If Tomorrow Never Comes" was named Favorite Country Single in the American Music Awards of 1991.
Wilmslow High School is a mixed-sex 11–18 comprehensive secondary school in Wilmslow, Cheshire, England. The school began in 1960 as a grammar school and gradually became a comprehensive school, becoming Wilmslow High School in 1991.
James Dexter Weatherly was an American singer-songwriter who wrote mostly pop and country music. He played quarterback at the University of Mississippi while also writing music with his own bands. He subsequently chose songwriting over a football career. His notable songs include "The Need to Be" and "Midnight Train to Georgia".
André Charles Jean Popp was a French composer, arranger and screenwriter.
President Records is a British independent record label. It is one of the oldest independent record companies in the UK, originally launched in 1957 by Edward Kassner. During the 1960s and 1970s the label, and its subsidiary Jay Boy, had hits with artists including the Equals, George McCrae and KC & the Sunshine Band, Paintbox, and later focused on releasing back-catalogue compilations as well as occasional new albums by artists such as Robots In Disguise. President Records remains part of the Kassner Music Group.
Professor Anthony Oakley Dyson was a priest in the Church of England and Professor of Social and Pastoral Theology, Manchester University 1980–1998.
Robert Hafner was an American record producer and songwriter who, along with Tony Hilder, was responsible for many of the surf records that came out in California in the 1960s including "Vesuvius" and "Intoxica" by The Revels. He also contributed to the music for the film The Exiles. Music historian and author Robert Dalley said that he had a definite place in surf history.
George McCurn was an American bass singer who started off singing gospel and switched to pop in the 1960s. He had a hit in 1963 with "I'm Just a Country Boy".
"The Bridge" was a #1 chart hit in 1981 for New Zealand singer Deane Waretini, and his backing group The Rising Stars. This also marked a first. It was the first Maori language record to hit the no 1 spot in New Zealand. "The Bridge" is an example of an artist in the 1980s contributing to the success of a record. This was done by kick starting the process in the beginning by self-financing the record, having a hand in its own promotion by employing various tactics to get the record heard by the public.
Street was a rock group from New York that was around from the late 1960s to the early 1970s. They were fronted by female singer Anya Cohen and were managed by record producer Rick Shorter. They released a self-titled album and a couple of singles. They had a good degree of success with their single "One Kind Favor".
"Get Another Love" is a song by Tunisian-born French singer Chantal Curtis, released as a single in 1979. It was written by Ernest Donable who was a member of the band that backed her on the recording. The song is Curtis's most successful recording.
Charles Williams Wright is an American singer, instrumentalist and songwriter. He has been a member of various doo wop groups in the late 1950s and early 1960s as well as a solo artist in his own right. He is also the former leader and writer of hits for the group, Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band.
David MacBeth is an English pop music singer. Despite releasing a string of singles on three record labels between 1959 and 1969, MacBeth's only chart success was with his version of "Mr. Blue", which peaked at number 18 in the UK Singles Chart. MacBeth took part in the 1963 Roy Orbison/The Beatles Tour.